Epilepsy & Behavior Reports (Jan 2024)

Magnetoencephalographic detection of synchronized epileptic activity between the hippocampus and insular cortex

  • Akitake Okamura,
  • Akira Hashizume,
  • Kota Kagawa,
  • Go Seyama,
  • Atsuo Yoshino,
  • Shigeto Yamawaki,
  • Nobutaka Horie,
  • Koji Iida

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 26
p. 100669

Abstract

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Most magnetoencephalographic signals are derived from synchronized activity in the brain surface cortex. By contrast, the contribution of synchronized activity in the deep brain to magnetoencephalography (MEG) has remained unclear. We compared stereotactic electroencephalography (sEEG) with simultaneous MEG findings in a patient with temporal lobe epilepsy to determine the conditions under which MEG could also detect sEEG findings. The synchrony and similarity of the waves were evaluated using visual inspection and wavelet coherence. A 45-year-old woman with intractable temporal lobe epilepsy underwent sEEG and MEG simultaneously to determine the laterality and precise location of the epileptic focus. When spike-and-waves were seen in the right hippocampal head alone, no distinct spike-and-waves were observed visually in the right temporal MEG. The seizure then spread to the right insula on sEEG with a rhythmic theta frequency while synchronous activity was observed in the right temporal MEG channels. When polyspikes appeared in the right hippocampus, the right temporal MEG showed electrical activity with relatively high similarity to that of the right hippocampal head and insular cortex but less similarity to that of the right lateral temporal lobe cortex. MEG might detect epileptic activity synchronized between the hippocampus and insular cortex.

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