Neuropsychiatric Disease and Treatment (Oct 2023)

The Association of Nocturnal Seizures and Interictal Cardiac/Central Autonomic Function in Frontal Lobe Epilepsy: Heart Rate Variability and Central Autonomic Network Analysis

  • Kim W,
  • Lee H,
  • Lee KW,
  • Yang E,
  • Kim S

Journal volume & issue
Vol. Volume 19
pp. 2081 – 2091

Abstract

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Woojun Kim,1 Hyunjo Lee,2 Kyung Won Lee,3 Eunjin Yang,3 Seonghoon Kim3 1Department of Neurology, Seoul St. Mary’s Hospital, College of Medicine, The Catholic University of Korea, Seoul, Republic of Korea; 2Department of Neurology, Ulsan University Hospital, College of Medicine, University of Ulsan, Ulsan, Republic of Korea; 3Department of Neurology, Uijeongbu St. Mary’s Hospital, College of Medicine, The Catholic University of Korea, Seoul, Republic of KoreaCorrespondence: Seonghoon Kim, Department of Neurology, The Catholic University of Korea, College of Medicine, Uijeongbu St. Mary’s Hospital, 271 Cheonbo-ro, Uijeongbu-si, Gyeonggi-do, Seoul, Republic of Korea, Tel +82-31-820-3114, Fax +82-31-821-3661, Email [email protected]: Patients with epilepsy frequently experience autonomic dysfunction, closely related to sudden unexplained death in epilepsy (SUDEP). SUDEP occurs most often at night or during sleep, and frequent nocturnal seizures are an established risk factor. This study investigated the influence of nocturnal seizures on autonomic dysfunction in epilepsy.Patients and Methods: This retrospective study enrolled frontal lobe epilepsy (FLE) patients who performed 24-hour EEG monitoring. All participants were divided into nocturnal FLE (NFLE, > 90% of seizures occurring during sleep) or diurnal FLE (DFLE) groups. EEG and ECG signals were simultaneously obtained during waking and sleep stages. EEG current density source and connectivity analysis of the autonomic network were performed. ECG was analyzed across time and frequency domains heart rate variability (HRV) analysis method was used. The obtained parameters were compared between the NFLE and DFLE groups.Results: Fifteen NFLE and 16 DFLE patients were enrolled with no significant difference in age, sex, disease duration, seizure frequency, or the number of anti-seizure medications between the two groups. During sleep, a decrease in HRV parameters and an increase of the beta-1 (13– 22 Hz) current source density power in the bilateral paracentral lobule (BA4,5,6), precuneus (BA7), and cingulate (BA31) were observed in the NFLE group compared to DFLE group. The NFLE group also showed hyperconnectivity in the central autonomic (12 edges distributed over 10 nodes), sympathetic (2 edges distributed over 3 nodes), and parasympathetic (4 edges distributed over 6 nodes) beta-1 frequency band networks during sleep. During wakefulness, central and cardiac autonomic variables were not significantly different between the NFLE and DFLE groups.Conclusion: Interictal cardiac and central autonomic dysfunction occurred simultaneously and can be attributed to the brain-heart autonomic axis. Our findings suggest that nocturnal seizures may contribute to interictal autonomic dysfunction during sleep in people with epilepsy.Keywords: nocturnal seizure, heart rate variability, central autonomic network, sleep, autonomic dysfunction

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