Scott Christine M
Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, Massachusetts, USA.
Neurodiagn J. 2013 Dec;53(4):289-311.
This study investigates the relationship between interictal epileptiform discharges (IEDs) during sleep in children with benign rolandic epilepsy (BRE) and cognitive test scores as measured by the Wechsler Intelligence Scale for Children-Fourth Edition (WISC-IV) with the hypothesis that, as IEDs increase, cognitive test scores decrease. Studies have shown that generalized seizures and status epilepticus can negatively impact cognition (Dodrill 2004), that children with epilepsy have lower cognitive function on average than children without epilepsy and that children with epilepsy and abnormal electroencephalograms (EEGs) have lower cognitive function than children with epilepsy and normal EEGs (Bailet et al. 2000). Studies have also indicated that as IEDs decrease, neurocognitive test scores increase (Baglietto et al. 2001). The current study evaluated sleep-activated IEDs in children with the specific syndrome of benign rolandic epilepsy based on the frequency of LEDs in sleep in relation to cognitive test scores. Neuropsychological test scores from the WISC-IV were gathered along with the number of spikes per minute detected in EEG recordings. Statistical analysis revealed a negative correlation between spike frequency and both processing speed and coding scores, though the relationship did not reach statistical significance. This study concludes that there may be correlations between increased spike density and cognitive test scores, or there might be other factors impacting cognition in BRE, but a larger sample is needed to further investigate. In addition, it is possible that a negative result in the present study represents good news, that the number of IEDs in BRE does not harm the brain by negatively impacting cognition.
本研究调查了良性罗兰多癫痫(BRE)患儿睡眠期间的发作间期癫痫样放电(IEDs)与韦氏儿童智力量表第四版(WISC-IV)所测认知测试分数之间的关系,其假设为,随着IEDs增加,认知测试分数会降低。研究表明,全身性癫痫发作和癫痫持续状态会对认知产生负面影响(多德里尔,2004年),癫痫患儿的平均认知功能低于无癫痫的儿童,且癫痫患儿中脑电图(EEG)异常者的认知功能低于EEG正常者(贝利特等人,2000年)。研究还表明,随着IEDs减少,神经认知测试分数会增加(巴列托等人,2001年)。本研究基于睡眠中LEDs的频率与认知测试分数的关系,评估了患有特定综合征良性罗兰多癫痫患儿的睡眠激活IEDs。收集了来自WISC-IV的神经心理学测试分数以及EEG记录中每分钟检测到的尖峰数量。统计分析显示尖峰频率与处理速度和编码分数之间存在负相关,尽管这种关系未达到统计学显著性。本研究得出结论,尖峰密度增加与认知测试分数之间可能存在相关性, 或者可能存在其他影响BRE认知的因素,但需要更大的样本进一步研究。此外,本研究中的阴性结果可能代表一个好消息,即BRE中的IEDs数量不会通过对认知产生负面影响而损害大脑。