Ictal fast activity chirps as markers of the epileptogenic zone

Author:

Di Giacomo Roberta1ORCID,Burini Alessandra12,Chiarello Daniela3,Pelliccia Veronica3,Deleo Francesco1ORCID,Garbelli Rita1ORCID,de Curtis Marco1ORCID,Tassi Laura3,Gnatkovsky Vadym14

Affiliation:

1. Epilepsy Unit Fondazione IRCCS Istituto Neurologico Carlo Besta Milan Italy

2. Clinical Neurology, Department of Medicine (DAME) University of Udine Udine Italy

3. “Claudio Munari” Epilepsy Surgery Center Niguarda Hospital Milan Italy

4. Department of Epileptology Universitätsklinikum Bonn Bonn Germany

Abstract

AbstractThe identification of the epileptogenic zone (EZ) boundaries is crucial for effective focal epilepsy surgery. We verify the value of a neurophysiological biomarker of focal ictogenesis, characterized by a low‐voltage fast‐activity ictal pattern (chirp) recorded with intracerebral electrodes during invasive presurgical monitoring (stereoelectroencephalography [SEEG]). The frequency content of SEEG signals was retrospectively analyzed with semiautomatic software in 176 consecutive patients with focal epilepsies that either were cryptogenic or presented with discordant anatomoelectroclinical findings. Fast activity seizure patterns with the spectrographic features of chirps were confirmed by computer‐assisted analysis in 95.4% of patients who presented with heterogeneous etiologies and diverse lobar location of the EZ. Statistical analysis demonstrated (1) correlation between seizure outcome and concordance of sublobar regions included in the EZ defined by visual analysis and chirp‐generating regions, (2) high concordance in contact‐by contact analysis of 68 patients with Engel class Ia outcome, and (3) that discordance between chirp location and the visually outlined EZ correlated with worse seizure outcome. Seizure outcome analysis confirms the fast activity chirp pattern is a reproducible biomarker of the EZ in a heterogeneous group of patients undergoing SEEG.

Funder

Ministero della Salute

Publisher

Wiley

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