Tomkins Oren, Feintuch Akiva, Benifla Moni, Cohen Avi, Friedman Alon, Shelef Ilan
Departments of Physiology and Neurobiology, Zlotowski Center for Neuroscience, Ben-Gurion University of the Negev, 84105 Beer-Sheva, Israel.
Cardiovasc Psychiatry Neurol. 2011;2011:765923. doi: 10.1155/2011/765923. Epub 2011 Feb 22.
Recent animal experiments indicate a critical role for opening of the blood-brain barrier (BBB) in the pathogenesis of post-traumatic epilepsy (PTE). This study aimed to investigate the frequency, extent, and functional correlates of BBB disruption in epileptic patients following mild traumatic brain injury (TBI). Thirty-seven TBI patients were included in this study, 19 of whom suffered from PTE. All underwent electroencephalographic (EEG) recordings and brain magnetic resonance imaging (bMRI). bMRIs were evaluated for BBB disruption using novel quantitative techniques. Cortical dysfunction was localized using standardized low-resolution brain electromagnetic tomography (sLORETA). TBI patients displayed significant EEG slowing compared to controls with no significant differences between PTE and nonepileptic patients. BBB disruption was found in 82.4% of PTE compared to 25% of non-epileptic patients (P = .001) and could be observed even years following the trauma. The volume of cerebral cortex with BBB disruption was significantly larger in PTE patients (P = .001). Slow wave EEG activity was localized to the same region of BBB disruption in 70% of patients and correlated to the volume of BBB disrupted cortex. We finally present a patient suffering from early cortical dysfunction and BBB breakdown with a gradual and parallel resolution of both pathologies. Our findings demonstrate that BBB pathology is frequently found following mild TBI. Lasting BBB breakdown is found with increased frequency and extent in PTE patients. Based on recent animal studies and the colocalization found between the region of disrupted BBB and abnormal EEG activity, we suggest a role for a vascular lesion in the pathogenesis of PTE.
近期的动物实验表明,血脑屏障(BBB)开放在创伤后癫痫(PTE)的发病机制中起关键作用。本研究旨在调查轻度创伤性脑损伤(TBI)后癫痫患者血脑屏障破坏的频率、程度及其功能相关性。本研究纳入了37例TBI患者,其中19例患有PTE。所有患者均接受了脑电图(EEG)记录和脑磁共振成像(bMRI)检查。使用新型定量技术评估bMRI上的血脑屏障破坏情况。采用标准化低分辨率脑电磁断层扫描(sLORETA)定位皮质功能障碍。与对照组相比,TBI患者的脑电图显示出明显减慢,PTE患者与非癫痫患者之间无显著差异。82.4%的PTE患者存在血脑屏障破坏,而非癫痫患者中这一比例为25%(P = 0.001),甚至在创伤数年之后仍可观察到血脑屏障破坏。PTE患者中存在血脑屏障破坏的大脑皮质体积显著更大(P = 0.001)。70%的患者慢波脑电图活动定位于血脑屏障破坏的同一区域,且与血脑屏障破坏皮质的体积相关。我们最后展示了一名患有早期皮质功能障碍和血脑屏障破坏的患者,两种病变均逐渐且平行地得到缓解。我们的研究结果表明,轻度TBI后经常发现血脑屏障病变。在PTE患者中,血脑屏障持续破坏的频率和程度更高。基于近期的动物研究以及血脑屏障破坏区域与异常脑电图活动之间的共定位,我们认为血管病变在PTE的发病机制中起作用。