AI Article Synopsis

  • * Participants included 30 individuals (9 with focal epilepsy, 11 with generalized epilepsy, and 10 without seizures), who underwent extensive EEG recordings before, during, and after taVNS stimulation.
  • * Results showed that generalized epilepsy exhibited distinct brain network properties at rest compared to focal epilepsy, and responses to taVNS varied between the two, suggesting that taVNS may impact global brain network characteristics differently based on epilepsy type.

Article Abstract

Epilepsy types differ by pathophysiology and prognosis. Transcutaneous auricular vagus nerve stimulation (taVNS) is a non-invasive treatment option in epilepsy. Nevertheless, its mode of action and impact on different types of epilepsy are still unknown. We investigated whether short-term taVNS differently affects local and global characteristics of EEG-derived functional brain networks in different types of epilepsy. Thirty subjects (nine with focal epilepsy, 11 with generalized epilepsy, and 10 without epilepsy or seizures) underwent a 3-h continuous EEG-recording (1 h pre-stimulation, 1 h taVNS stimulation, 1 h post-stimulation) from which we derived evolving functional brain networks. We assessed-in a time-resolved manner-important global (topological, robustness, and stability properties) and local (centralities of vertices and edges) network characteristics. Compared to the subjects with focal epilepsies and without epilepsy, those with generalized epilepsies clearly presented with different topological properties of their functional brain network already at rest. Furthermore, subjects with focal and generalized epilepsies reacted differently to the stimulation, expressed as different taVNS-induced immediate and enduring reorganization of global network characteristics. On the local network scale, no discernible spatial pattern could be detected, which points to a rather unspecific and generalized modification of brain activity. Assessing functional brain network characteristics can provide additional information for differentiating between focal and generalized epilepsy. TaVNS-related modifications of global network characteristics clearly differ between epilepsy types. Impact of such a non-pharmaceutical intervention on clinical decision-making in the treatment of different epilepsy types needs to be assessed in future studies.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9260140PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fnhum.2022.867563DOI Listing

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