Seizure initiation in infantile spasms vs. focal seizures: proposed common cellular mechanisms
Author:
Traub Roger D.12, Moeller Friederike3, Rosch Richard4, Baldeweg Torsten5, Whittington Miles A.6, Hall Stephen P.6
Affiliation:
1. IBM Thomas J. Watson Research Center , Yorktown Heights, NY 10598 , USA 2. Department of Neurology , Columbia University , New York, NY 10032 , USA 3. Department of Clinical Neurophysiology , Great Ormond Street Hospital , London WC1N 3JH , UK 4. MRC Centre for Neurodevelopmental Disorders , King’s College London , New Hunt’s House , London SE1 1UL , UK 5. Institute of Child Health , University College London , 30 Guildford Street , London WC1N 1EH , UK 6. Hull York Medical School , University of York , Heslington YO10 5DD , UK
Abstract
Abstract
Infantile spasms (IS) and seizures with focal onset have different clinical expressions, even when electroencephalography (EEG) associated with IS has some degree of focality. Oddly, identical pathology (with, however, age-dependent expression) can lead to IS in one patient vs. focal seizures in another or even in the same, albeit older, patient. We therefore investigated whether the cellular mechanisms underlying seizure initiation are similar in the two instances: spasms vs. focal. We noted that in-common EEG features can include (i) a background of waves at alpha to delta frequencies; (ii) a period of flattening, lasting about a second or more – the electrodecrement (ED); and (iii) often an interval of very fast oscillations (VFO; ~70 Hz or faster) preceding, or at the beginning of, the ED. With IS, VFO temporally coincides with the motor spasm. What is different between the two conditions is this: with IS, the ED reverts to recurring slow waves, as occurring before the ED, whereas with focal seizures the ED instead evolves into an electrographic seizure, containing high-amplitude synchronized bursts, having superimposed VFO. We used in vitro data to help understand these patterns, as such data suggest cellular mechanisms for delta waves, for VFO, for seizure-related burst complexes containing VFO, and, more recently, for the ED. We propose a unifying mechanistic hypothesis – emphasizing the importance of brain pH – to explain the commonalities and differences of EEG signals in IS versus focal seizures.
Publisher
Walter de Gruyter GmbH
Subject
General Neuroscience
Reference133 articles.
1. Aggarwal, M., Kondeti, B., and McKenna, R. (2013). Anticonvulsant/antiepileptic carbonic anhydrase inhibitors: a patent review. Expert Opin. Ther. Pat. 23, 717–724. 2. Akiyama, T., Otsubo, H., Ochi, A., Ishiguro, T., Kadokura, G., Nair, R.R., Weiss, S.K., Rutka, J.T., and Snead 3rd, O.C. (2005). Focal cortical high-frequency oscillations trigger epileptic spasms: confirmation by digital video subdural EEG. Clin. Neurophysiol. 116, 2819–2825. 3. Amzica, F. and Steriade, M. (1995). Short- and long-range neuronal synchronization of the slow (<1 Hz) cortical oscillation. J. Neurophysiol. 73, 20–38. 4. André, V.M., Flores-Hernández, J., Cepeda, C., Starling, A.J., Nguyen, S., Lobo, M.K., Vinters, H.V., Levine, M.S., and Mathern, G.W. (2004). NMDA receptor alterations in neurons from pediatric cortical dysplasia tissue. Cereb. Cortex 14, 634–646. 5. Apostolides, P.F., Milstein, A.D., Grienberger, C., Bittner, K.C., and Magee, J.C. (2016). Axonal filtering allows reliable output during dendritic plateau-driven complex spiking in CA1 neurons. Neuron 89, 770–783.
Cited by
12 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献
|
|