Kay Benjamin, Szaflarski Jerzy P
Graduate Program in Neuroscience, University of Cincinnati Academic Health Center, Cincinnati, OH, USA; Department of Neurology, University of Cincinnati Academic Health Center, Cincinnati, OH, USA.
Department of Neurology, University of Cincinnati Academic Health Center, Cincinnati, OH, USA; Department of Neurology, University of Alabama at Birmingham (UAB) Epilepsy Center, UAB, Birmingham, AL, USA.
Epilepsy Behav. 2014 May;34:129-35. doi: 10.1016/j.yebeh.2014.02.030. Epub 2014 Mar 25.
The first reports of combined EEG and fMRI used for evaluation of epileptic spikes date back to the mid-90s. At that time, the technique was called EEG-triggered fMRI--the "triggered" corresponded to an epilepsy specialist reviewing live EEG while the patient was located in the scanner; after the spike was identified, a scan was initiated to collect the data. Since then major progress has been made in combined EEG/fMRI data collection and analyses. These advances allow studying the electrophysiology of genetic generalized epilepsies (GGEs) in vivo in greater detail than ever. In addition to continuous data collection, we now have better methods for removing physiologic and fMRI-related artifacts, more advanced understanding of the hemodynamic response functions, and better computational methods to address the questions regarding the origins of the epileptiform discharge generators in patients with GGEs. These advances have allowed us to examine numerous cohorts of children and adults with GGEs while not only looking for spike and wave generators but also examining specific types of GGEs (e.g., juvenile myoclonic epilepsy or childhood absence epilepsy), drug-naïve patients, effects of medication resistance, or effects of epileptiform abnormalities and/or seizures on brain connectivity. While the discussion is ongoing, the prevailing thought is that the GGEs as a group are a network disorder with participation from multiple nodes including the thalami and cortex with the clinical presentation depending on which node of the participating network is affected by the disease process. This review discusses the contributions of EEG/fMRI to our understanding of GGEs.
脑电图(EEG)与功能磁共振成像(fMRI)联合用于评估癫痫棘波的首次报道可追溯到20世纪90年代中期。当时,这项技术被称为EEG触发的fMRI——“触发”是指癫痫专科医生在患者位于扫描仪内时查看实时脑电图;在识别出棘波后,启动扫描以收集数据。从那时起,EEG/fMRI联合数据采集和分析取得了重大进展。这些进展使我们能够比以往更详细地在体内研究遗传性全身性癫痫(GGE)的电生理学。除了连续数据采集外,我们现在有了更好的方法来去除生理和fMRI相关的伪影,对血液动力学反应函数有了更深入的理解,以及更好的计算方法来解决有关GGE患者癫痫样放电发生器起源的问题。这些进展使我们能够检查众多患有GGE的儿童和成人队列,不仅寻找棘波和慢波发生器,还能检查特定类型的GGE(如青少年肌阵挛癫痫或儿童失神癫痫)、未服用过药物的患者、药物抵抗的影响,或癫痫样异常和/或发作对脑连接性的影响。虽然讨论仍在进行中,但普遍的观点是,GGE作为一个整体是一种网络疾病,多个节点包括丘脑和皮层都参与其中,临床表现取决于参与网络的哪个节点受到疾病过程的影响。这篇综述讨论了EEG/fMRI对我们理解GGE的贡献。