Impaired brain-heart axis in focal epilepsy: Alterations in information flow and implications for seizure dynamics

Author:

Frassineti Lorenzo1,Catrambone Vincenzo2,Lanatà Antonio1,Valenza Gaetano2

Affiliation:

1. Department of Information Engineering, Università degli Studi di Firenze, Firenze, Italy

2. Department of Information Engineering and Bioengineering & Robotics Research Center E. Piaggio, University of Pisa, Pisa, Italy

Abstract

Abstract This study delves into functional brain-heart interplay (BHI) dynamics during interictal periods before and after seizure events in focal epilepsy. Our analysis focuses on elucidating the causal interaction between cortical and autonomic nervous system (ANS) oscillations, employing electroencephalography and heart rate variability series. The dataset for this investigation comprises 47 seizure events from 14 independent subjects, obtained from the publicly available Siena Dataset. Our findings reveal an impaired brain-heart axis especially in the heart-to-brain functional direction. This is particularly evident in bottom-up oscillations originating from sympathovagal activity during the transition between preictal and postictal periods. These results indicate a pivotal role of the ANS in epilepsy dynamics. Notably, the brain-to-heart information flow targeting cardiac oscillations in the low-frequency band does not display significant changes. However, there are noteworthy changes in cortical oscillations, primarily originating in central regions, influencing heartbeat oscillations in the high-frequency band. Our study conceptualizes seizures as a state of hyperexcitability and a network disease affecting both cortical and peripheral neural dynamics. Our results pave the way for a deeper understanding of BHI in epilepsy, which holds promise for the development of advanced diagnostic and therapeutic approaches also based on bodily neural activity for individuals living with epilepsy.

Funder

European Commission

Italian Ministry of Education and Research

PNRR project THE

Publisher

MIT Press

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