Scientific Reports (Feb 2022)

Functional network connectivity imprint in febrile seizures

  • Ullas V. Acharya,
  • Karthik Kulanthaivelu,
  • Rajanikant Panda,
  • Jitender Saini,
  • Arun K. Gupta,
  • Bindu Parayil Sankaran,
  • Kenchaiah Raghavendra,
  • Ravindranath Chowdary Mundlamuri,
  • Sanjib Sinha,
  • M. L. Keshavamurthy,
  • Rose Dawn Bharath

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-022-07173-9
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 1
pp. 1 – 11

Abstract

Read online

Abstract Complex febrile seizures (CFS), a subset of paediatric febrile seizures (FS), have been studied for their prognosis, epileptogenic potential and neurocognitive outcome. We evaluated their functional connectivity differences with simple febrile seizures (SFS) in children with recent-onset FS. Resting-state fMRI (rs-fMRI) datasets of 24 children with recently diagnosed FS (SFS-n = 11; CFS-n = 13) were analysed. Functional connectivity (FC) was estimated using time series correlation of seed region–to-whole-brain-voxels and network topology was assessed using graph theory measures. Regional connectivity differences were correlated with clinical characteristics (FDR corrected p < 0.05). CFS patients demonstrated increased FC of the bilateral middle temporal pole (MTP), and bilateral thalami when compared to SFS. Network topology study revealed increased clustering coefficient and decreased participation coefficient in basal ganglia and thalamus suggesting an inefficient-unbalanced network topology in patients with CFS. The number of seizure recurrences negatively correlated with the integration of Left Thalamus (r = − 0.58) and FC of Left MTP to 'Right Supplementary Motor and left Precentral' gyrus (r = − 0.53). The FC of Right MTP to Left Amygdala, Putamen, Parahippocampal, and Orbital Frontal Cortex (r = 0.61) and FC of Left Thalamus to left Putamen, Pallidum, Caudate, Thalamus Hippocampus and Insula (r 0.55) showed a positive correlation to the duration of the longest seizure. The findings of the current study report altered connectivity in children with CFS proportional to the seizure recurrence and duration. Regardless of the causal/consequential nature, such observations demonstrate the imprint of these disease-defining variables of febrile seizures on the developing brain.