Clinical Neurophysiology Practice (Jan 2022)

Changes of interictal epileptiform discharges during medication withdrawal and seizures: A scalp EEG marker of epileptogenicity

  • Pia De Stefano,
  • Eric Ménétré,
  • Serge Vulliémoz,
  • Pieter Van Mierlo,
  • Margitta Seeck

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 7
pp. 279 – 284

Abstract

Read online

Objective: To determine the influence of antiseizure medication (ASM) withdrawal on interictal epileptogenic discharges (IEDs) in scalp-EEG and seizure propensity. Methods: We included 35 adult unifocal epilepsy patients admitted for presurgical evaluation in the EEG and Epilepsy Unit of Geneva between 2016 and 2020, monitored for at least 5 days. ASM was individually tapered down, and automated IED detection was performed using Epilog PreOp (Epilog NV, Belgium, Ghent). We compared spike rate per hour (SR) at day 1 when patients were on full medication (baseline) with SR at the day with the lowest dose of medication. To determine possible peri-ictal changes of SR, we compared SR 8 h before and after a seizure with the SR at the same time of the baseline day. Results: Our results showed a significant increase in spiking activity in the day of lowest drug load if compared to spike rate at day on full medication (p < 0.001). The total amount of spikes during 24 h correlated significantly with seizure occurrence (p < 0.0001). We also revealed significant increase in peri-ictal SR, in particular 2–4 h preceding a seizure (p = 0.05) extending up to 3 h after the seizure (p = 0.03) with a short decrease just before seizure occurrence. Conclusions: Our results suggest that SR increases with medication withdrawal and particularly before and after seizures. There is a complex pattern of increase and decrease around seizure onset which explains divergent results in previous studies. Significance: Precise spike counting at similar circadian periods for a patient could help to determine the risk of seizure occurrence in a personalized fashion.

Keywords