Modification of brain conductivity in human focal epilepsy: A model-based estimation from stereoelectroencephalography

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Abstract

Objective: We have developed a novel method for estimating brain tissue electrical conductivity using low-intensity pulse stereoelectroencephalography (SEEG) stimulation coupled with biophysical modeling. We evaluated the hypothesis that brain conductivity is correlated with the degree of epileptogenicity in patients with drug-resistant focal epilepsy. Methods: We used bipolar low-intensity biphasic pulse stimulation (.2 mA) followed by a postprocessing pipeline for estimating brain conductivity. This processing is based on biophysical modeling of the electrical potential induced in brain tissue between the stimulated contacts in response to pulse stimulation. We estimated the degree of epileptogenicity using a semi-automatic method quantifying the dynamic of fast discharge at seizure onset: the epileptogenicity index (EI). We also investigated how the location of stimulation within specific anatomical brain regions or within lesional tissue impacts brain conductivity. Results: We performed 1034 stimulations of 511 bipolar channels in 16 patients. We found that brain conductivity was lower in the epileptogenic zone (EZ; unpaired median difference =.064, p

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Lagarde, S., Modolo, J., Yochum, M., Carvallo, A., Ballabeni, A., Scavarda, D., … Wendling, F. (2024). Modification of brain conductivity in human focal epilepsy: A model-based estimation from stereoelectroencephalography. Epilepsia, 65(6), 1744–1755. https://doi.org/10.1111/epi.17957

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