Neuropaediatric Department, Paediatric Hospital, Christian-Albrechts-University, Schwanenweg 20, Kiel, Germany.
Brain. 2010 Sep;133(9):2798-813. doi: 10.1093/brain/awq183. Epub 2010 Aug 5.
Epileptic encephalopathy with continuous spikes and waves during slow sleep is an age-related disorder characterized by the presence of interictal epileptiform discharges during at least >85% of sleep and cognitive deficits associated with this electroencephalography pattern. The pathophysiological mechanisms of continuous spikes and waves during slow sleep and neuropsychological deficits associated with this condition are still poorly understood. Here, we investigated the haemodynamic changes associated with epileptic activity using simultaneous acquisitions of electroencephalography and functional magnetic resonance imaging in 12 children with symptomatic and cryptogenic continuous spikes and waves during slow sleep. We compared the results of magnetic resonance to electric source analysis carried out using a distributed linear inverse solution at two time points of the averaged epileptic spike. All patients demonstrated highly significant spike-related positive (activations) and negative (deactivations) blood oxygenation-level-dependent changes (P < 0.05, family-wise error corrected). The activations involved bilateral perisylvian region and cingulate gyrus in all cases, bilateral frontal cortex in five, bilateral parietal cortex in one and thalamus in five cases. Electrical source analysis demonstrated a similar involvement of the perisylvian brain regions in all patients, independent of the area of spike generation. The spike-related deactivations were found in structures of the default mode network (precuneus, parietal cortex and medial frontal cortex) in all patients and in caudate nucleus in four. Group analyses emphasized the described individual differences. Despite aetiological heterogeneity, patients with continuous spikes and waves during slow sleep were characterized by activation of the similar neuronal network: perisylvian region, insula and cingulate gyrus. Comparison with the electrical source analysis results suggests that the activations correspond to both initiation and propagation pathways. The deactivations in structures of the default mode network are consistent with the concept of epileptiform activity impacting on normal brain function by inducing repetitive interruptions of neurophysiological function.
睡眠中持续棘慢波的癫痫性脑病是一种与年龄相关的疾病,其特征是至少 85%的睡眠中存在发作间期棘慢波放电,并且存在与此脑电图模式相关的认知缺陷。睡眠中持续棘慢波的病理生理机制以及与此病症相关的神经心理缺陷仍知之甚少。在此,我们使用同时采集的脑电图和功能磁共振成像,对 12 名有症状和隐源性睡眠中持续棘慢波的儿童进行研究,以研究与癫痫活动相关的血液动力学变化。我们将在平均癫痫棘波的两个时间点使用分布式线性逆解进行电源分析的结果与磁共振结果进行了比较。所有患者均表现出与棘波高度相关的显著正(激活)和负(失活)血氧水平依赖性变化(P < 0.05,经家族性错误校正)。所有病例均涉及双侧额颞叶皮层激活,双侧扣带回激活,5 例双侧额皮质激活,1 例双侧顶皮质激活和 5 例丘脑激活。电源分析表明,所有患者的大脑区域均有类似的参与,与棘波生成区域无关。所有患者均在默认模式网络结构中发现了与棘波相关的失活(楔前叶、顶叶皮质和内侧额皮质),而 4 例患者在尾状核中发现了失活。组分析强调了所述的个体差异。尽管病因学存在异质性,但睡眠中持续棘慢波的患者具有相似的神经元网络激活特征:包括颞叶皮层、岛叶和扣带回。与电源分析结果的比较表明,这些激活既对应于起始途径,也对应于传播途径。默认模式网络结构中的失活与癫痫样活动通过反复中断神经生理功能而对正常脑功能产生影响的概念一致。