High-Frequency Activity During Stereotyped Low-Frequency Events Might Help to Identify the Seizure Onset Zone.

High-Frequency Activity During Stereotyped Low-Frequency Events Might Help to Identify the Seizure Onset Zone. Epilepsy Curr. 2019 Mar-Apr;19(2):1535759719842236 Authors: Ahmed OJ, Sudhakar SK Abstract Stereotyped high-frequency oscillations discriminate seizure onset zones and critical functional cortex in focal epilepsy. Liu S, Gurses C, Sha Z, Quach MM, Sencer A, Bebek N, et al. Brain. 2018;141(3):713-730. doi:10.1093/brain/awx374. PMID: 29394328 . High-frequency oscillations in local field potentials recorded with intracranial electroencephalogram are putative biomarkers of seizure-onset zones in epileptic brain. However, localized 80- to 500-Hz oscillations can also be recorded from normal and nonepileptic cerebral structures. When defined only by rate or frequency, physiological high-frequency oscillations are indistinguishable from pathological ones that limit their application in epilepsy presurgical planning. We hypothesized that pathological high-frequency oscillations occur in a repetitive fashion with a similar waveform morphology that specifically indicates seizure onset zones. We investigated the waveform patterns of automatically detected high-frequency oscillations in 13 patients with epilepsy and 5 control subjects, with an average of 73 subdural and intracerebral electrodes recorded per patient. The repetitive oscillatory waveforms were identified using a pipeline of unsupervised machine learning techniques and were...
Source: Epilepsy Currents - Category: Neurology Tags: Epilepsy Curr Source Type: research