Spectral changes following resective epilepsy surgery and neurocognitive function in children with epilepsy

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Abstract

Decelerated resting cortical oscillations, high-frequency activity, and enhanced cross-frequency interactions are features of focal epilepsy. The association between electrophysiological signal properties and neurocognitive function, particularly following resective surgery, is, however, unclear. In the current report, we studied intraoperative recordings from intracranial electrodes implanted in seven children with focal epilepsy and analyzed the spectral dynamics both before and after surgical resection of the hypothesized seizure focus. The associations between electrophysiological spectral signatures and each child’s neurocognitive profiles were characterized using a partial least squares analysis. We find that extent of spectral alteration at the periphery of surgical resection, as indexed by slowed resting frequency and its acceleration following surgery, is associated with baseline cognitive deficits in children. The current report provides evidence supporting the relationship between altered spectral properties in focal epilepsy and neuropsychological deficits in children. In particular, these findings suggest a critical role of disrupted thalamocortical rhythms, which are believed to underlie the spectral alterations we describe, in both epileptogenicity and neurocognitive function.

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Arski, O. N., Wong, S. M., Warsi, N. M., Martire, D. J., Ochi, A., Otsubo, H., … Ibrahim, G. M. (2021). Spectral changes following resective epilepsy surgery and neurocognitive function in children with epilepsy. Journal of Neurophysiology, 126(5), 1614–1621. https://doi.org/10.1152/jn.00434.2020

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