刺激
癫痫
神经科学
神经调节
神经刺激
脑深部刺激
脑刺激
医学
心理学
脑电图
内科学
疾病
帕金森病
作者
Daria Nesterovich Anderson,Chantel M. Charlebois,Elliot H. Smith,Tyler S. Davis,Angela Peters,Blake Newman,Amir Arain,Karen S. Wilcox,Christopher R. Butson,John D. Rolston
出处
期刊:Brain
[Oxford University Press]
日期:2023-10-05
被引量:6
标识
DOI:10.1093/brain/awad343
摘要
In patients with drug-resistant epilepsy, electrical stimulation of the brain in response to epileptiform activity can make seizures less frequent and debilitating. This therapy, known as closed-loop responsive neurostimulation (RNS), aims to directly halt seizure activity via targeted stimulation of a burgeoning seizure. Rather than immediately stopping seizures as they start, many RNS implants produce slower, long-lasting changes in brain dynamics that better predict clinical outcomes. Here we hypothesize that stimulation during brain states with less epileptiform activity drives long-term changes that restore healthy brain networks. To test this, we quantified stimulation episodes during low- and high-risk brain states-that is, stimulation during periods with a lower or higher risk of generating epileptiform activity-in a cohort of 40 patients treated with RNS. More frequent stimulation in tonic low-risk states and out of rhythmic high-risk states predicted seizure reduction. Additionally, stimulation events were more likely to be phase-locked to prolonged episodes of abnormal activity for intermediate and poor responders when compared to super-responders, consistent with the hypothesis that improved outcomes are driven by stimulation during low-risk states. These results support the hypothesis that stimulation during low-risk periods might underlie the mechanisms of RNS, suggesting a relationship between temporal patterns of neuromodulation and plasticity that facilitates long-term seizure reduction.
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