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Mapping interictal oscillations greater than 200 Hz recorded with intracranial macroelectrodes in human epilepsy.

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TLDR
It is shown that this activity can be detected and its spatial extent determined with conventional intracranial electroencephalography electrodes in records from patients with temporal lobe epilepsy, and is a reliable marker of the seizure onset zone that should be considered in decisions on surgical treatment.
Abstract
Interictal high-frequency oscillations over 200 Hz have been recorded with microelectrodes in the seizure onset zone of epileptic patients suffering from mesial temporal lobe epilepsy. Recent work suggests that similar high-frequency oscillations can be detected in the seizure onset zone using standard diagnostic macroelectrodes. However, only a few channels were examined in these studies, so little information is available on the spatial extent of high-frequency oscillations. Here, we present data on high-frequency oscillations recorded from a larger number of intracerebral contacts spatial (mean 38) in 16 patients. Data were obtained from 1 h of interictal recording sampled at 1024 Hz and was analysed using a new semi-automatic detection procedure based on a wavelet decomposition. A detailed frequency analysis permitted a rapid and reliable discrimination of high-frequency oscillations from other high-frequency events. A total of 1932 high-frequency oscillations were detected with an average frequency of 261 +/- 53 Hz, amplitude of 11.9 +/- 6.7 microV and duration of 22.7 +/- 11.6 ms. Records from a patient often showed several different high-frequency oscillation patterns. We classified 24 patterns from 11 patients. Usually (20/24 patterns) high-frequency oscillations were nested in an epileptic paroxysm, such as a spike or a sharp wave, and typically high-frequency oscillations (19/24) were recorded from just one recording contact. Unexpectedly in other cases, high-frequency oscillations (5/24) were detected simultaneously on two or three contacts, sometimes separated by large distances. This large spatial extent suggests that high-frequency oscillations may sometimes result from a neuronal synchrony manifest on a scale of centimetres. High-frequency oscillations were almost always recorded in seizure-generating structures of patients suffering from mesial (9/9) or polar (1/3) temporal lobe epilepsy. They were never found in the epileptic or healthy basal, lateral temporal or extra temporal neocortex nor in the healthy amygdalo-hippocampal complex. These findings confirm that the generation of oscillations at frequencies higher that 200 Hz is, at this scale, a specific, intrinsic property of seizure-generating networks in medial and polar temporal lobes, which have a common archaic phylogenetic origin. We show that this activity can be detected and its spatial extent determined with conventional intracranial electroencephalography electrodes in records from patients with temporal lobe epilepsy. It is a reliable marker of the seizure onset zone that should be considered in decisions on surgical treatment.

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Journal ArticleDOI

High-frequency oscillations as a new biomarker in epilepsy.

TL;DR: High‐frequency HFOs appear excellent markers for the epileptogenic zone and show promise for improving surgical outcome and accelerating intracranial EEG investigations, which needs to be assessed by future research.
Journal ArticleDOI

High-frequency neural activity and human cognition: Past, present and possible future of intracranial EEG research

TL;DR: Overall, iEEG research on HFA should play an increasing role in cognitive neuroscience in humans, because it can be explicitly linked to basic research in animals, and the future evolution of this field is discussed.
Journal ArticleDOI

High-frequency oscillations (HFOs) in clinical epilepsy.

TL;DR: Even if HFOs are promising biomarkers of epileptic tissue, there are still uncertainties about mechanisms of generation, methods of analysis, and clinical applicability, and large multicenter prospective studies are needed prior to widespread clinical application.
Journal ArticleDOI

Mechanisms of physiological and epileptic HFO generation.

TL;DR: The role of out-of-phase firing in neuronal clusters, the importance of strong excitatory AMPA-synaptic currents and recurrent inhibitory connectivity in combination with the fast time scales of IPSPs, ephaptic coupling and the contribution of interneuronal coupling through gap junctions are considered.
Journal ArticleDOI

Interictal scalp fast oscillations as a marker of the seizure onset zone

TL;DR: The rates and the proportion of channels with gamma and ripple fast oscillations are higher inside the seizure onset zone (SOZ), indicating that they can be used as interictal scalp EEG markers for the SOZ.
References
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Neuronal Oscillations in Cortical Networks

TL;DR: Recent findings indicate that network oscillations bias input selection, temporally link neurons into assemblies, and facilitate synaptic plasticity, mechanisms that cooperatively support temporal representation and long-term consolidation of information.
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TL;DR: The neurobiology of epilepsy: neuronal excitability experimental modes of epilepsy and the autonomic nervous system comorbidity neuroendocrinology and the delivery of health care and socioeconomic issues.
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Surgery for seizures.

TL;DR: A large number of patients with medically refractory epilepsy who are treated with antiepileptic drugs continue to have seizures, and this group of patients accounts for over 75 percent of the cost of epilepsy in the United States.
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The Treatment of Epilepsy : Principles and Practice

Elaine Wyllie
TL;DR: Part I: Cellular Aspects of Epileptogenesis Part II: Neurodevelopment and Pathological Substrates ofEpilepsy Part III: Epilepsy Syndromes Part IV: Antiepileptic Medications and Other Therapies
Journal ArticleDOI

High-frequency oscillations in human brain.

TL;DR: Two similar types of high‐frequency field oscillations recorded from the entorhinal cortex and hippocampus of patients with mesial temporal lobe epilepsy are described, which are found in the epileptogenic region and may reflect pathological hypersynchronous population spikes of bursting pyramidal cells.
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