Institute of Medical Psychology and Medical Sociology, Christian-Albrechts-University of Kiel, Germany.
Department of Pediatric Neurology, CHU d'Angers, and Laboratoire Angevin de Recherche en Ingénierie des Systèmes (LARIS), Université d'Angers, France.
Epileptic Disord. 2019 Jun 1;21(S1):48-53. doi: 10.1684/epd.2019.1057.
In the last three decades, studies on functional neuroimaging have helped us to understand pathophysiological mechanisms responsible for electro-clinical patterns associated with epileptic encephalopathies with continuous spikes and waves during slow sleep (ECSWS). MEG and EEG source reconstruction have revealed sources of pathological brain activity associated with epileptiform discharges in the perisylvian region pointing to the significance of this brain area for ECSWS. PET studies have revealed areas of focal hypermetabolism in perisylvian, superior temporal and inferior parietal regions as well as central cortices which were related to epileptic activity. The widespread hypometabolism in regions that belong to the default network (prefrontal and posterior cingulate cortices, parahippocampal gyrus and precuneus) was interpreted as remote inhibition following epileptic activity, which could contribute to cognitive deficits in affected individuals. Note that the described metabolic changes were functional and disappeared after successful treatment and recovery of ECSWS and were found in both sleep and wakefulness which may account for cognitive deficits in patients during the day. EEG-fMRI studies have revealed a functional fingerprint of epileptic encephalopathy: significant positive BOLD signal changes were identified in the perisylvian regions, prefrontal cortex and anterior cingulate as well as thalamus and negative BOLD signal changes in the regions of the default mode network. The pattern of activation represents a propagation of epileptic activity specific to encephalopathy, which is independent of etiology and type of seizure associated with ECSWS. In summary, methods of neuroimaging have shed light on pathogenic mechanisms of ECSWS which may account for a number of clinical phenomena associated with this condition.
在过去的三十年中,功能神经影像学的研究帮助我们理解了导致与癫痫性脑病相关的电临床模式的病理生理机制,这些模式表现为睡眠中持续棘慢波(ECSWS)。MEG 和 EEG 源重建揭示了与颞叶区周围癫痫样放电相关的病理性脑活动的来源,这表明该脑区对 ECSWS 具有重要意义。PET 研究揭示了在颞叶、顶叶和下顶叶区域以及中央皮质存在局灶性高代谢区,这些区域与癫痫活动有关。广泛的默认网络(额极和后扣带回皮质、海马旁回和楔前叶)代谢低下被解释为癫痫活动后的远程抑制,这可能导致受影响个体的认知缺陷。需要注意的是,描述的代谢变化是功能性的,在 ECSWS 成功治疗和恢复后消失,并在睡眠和清醒状态下都存在,这可能是患者白天认知缺陷的原因。EEG-fMRI 研究揭示了癫痫性脑病的功能特征:在颞叶区、前额叶皮质和前扣带回以及丘脑发现了显著的正 BOLD 信号变化,而在默认模式网络区域则出现了负 BOLD 信号变化。激活模式代表了一种特定于脑病的癫痫活动传播,这种传播与病因和与 ECSWS 相关的癫痫发作类型无关。总之,神经影像学方法揭示了 ECSWS 的发病机制,这些机制可能解释了与这种情况相关的许多临床现象。