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Imaging slow brain activity during neocortical and hippocampal epileptiform events with electrical impedance tomography

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Imaging slow brain activity during neocortical and hippocampal epileptiform events with electrical impedance tomography. / Hannan, Sana; Aristovich, Kirill; Faulkner, Mayo et al.
In: Physiological Measurement, Vol. 42, 014001, 04.02.2021.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Hannan, S, Aristovich, K, Faulkner, M, Avery, J, Walker, MC & Holder, DS 2021, 'Imaging slow brain activity during neocortical and hippocampal epileptiform events with electrical impedance tomography', Physiological Measurement, vol. 42, 014001. https://doi.org/10.1088/1361-6579/abd67a

APA

Hannan, S., Aristovich, K., Faulkner, M., Avery, J., Walker, M. C., & Holder, D. S. (2021). Imaging slow brain activity during neocortical and hippocampal epileptiform events with electrical impedance tomography. Physiological Measurement, 42, Article 014001. https://doi.org/10.1088/1361-6579/abd67a

Vancouver

Hannan S, Aristovich K, Faulkner M, Avery J, Walker MC, Holder DS. Imaging slow brain activity during neocortical and hippocampal epileptiform events with electrical impedance tomography. Physiological Measurement. 2021 Feb 4;42:014001. doi: 10.1088/1361-6579/abd67a

Author

Hannan, Sana ; Aristovich, Kirill ; Faulkner, Mayo et al. / Imaging slow brain activity during neocortical and hippocampal epileptiform events with electrical impedance tomography. In: Physiological Measurement. 2021 ; Vol. 42.

Bibtex

@article{a9cb5403596847d0af1d16ba36f8e954,
title = "Imaging slow brain activity during neocortical and hippocampal epileptiform events with electrical impedance tomography",
abstract = "Objective. Electrical impedance tomography (EIT) is an imaging technique that produces tomographic images of internal impedance changes within an object using surface electrodes. It can be used to image the slow increase in cerebral tissue impedance that occurs over seconds during epileptic seizures, which is attributed to cell swelling due to disturbances in ion homeostasis following hypersynchronous neuronal firing and its associated metabolic demands. In this study, we characterised and imaged this slow impedance response during neocortical and hippocampal epileptiform events in the rat brain and evaluated its relationship to the underlying neural activity. Approach. Neocortical or hippocampal seizures, comprising repeatable series of high-amplitude ictal spikes, were induced by electrically stimulating the sensorimotor cortex or perforant path of rats anaesthetised with fentanyl-isoflurane. Transfer impedances were measured during ≥30 consecutive seizures, by applying a sinusoidal current through independent electrode pairs on an epicortical array, and combined to generate an EIT image of slow activity. Main results. The slow impedance responses were consistently time-matched to the end of seizures and EIT images of this activity were reconstructed reproducibly in all animals (p < 0.03125, N = 5). These displayed foci of activity that were spatially confined to the facial somatosensory cortex and dentate gyrus for neocortical and hippocampal seizures, respectively, and encompassed a larger volume as the seizure progressed. Centre-of-mass analysis of reconstructions revealed that this activity corresponded to the true location of the epileptogenic zone, as determined by EEG recordings and fast neural EIT measurements which were obtained simultaneously. Significance. These findings suggest that the slow impedance response presents a reliable marker of hypersynchronous neuronal activity during epileptic seizures and can thus be utilised for investigating the mechanisms of epileptogenesis in vivo and for aiding localisation of the epileptogenic zone during presurgical evaluation of patients with refractory epilepsies.",
author = "Sana Hannan and Kirill Aristovich and Mayo Faulkner and James Avery and Walker, {Matthew C} and Holder, {David S}",
year = "2021",
month = feb,
day = "4",
doi = "10.1088/1361-6579/abd67a",
language = "English",
volume = "42",
journal = "Physiological Measurement",
issn = "0967-3334",
publisher = "IOP Publishing Ltd.",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Imaging slow brain activity during neocortical and hippocampal epileptiform events with electrical impedance tomography

AU - Hannan, Sana

AU - Aristovich, Kirill

AU - Faulkner, Mayo

AU - Avery, James

AU - Walker, Matthew C

AU - Holder, David S

PY - 2021/2/4

Y1 - 2021/2/4

N2 - Objective. Electrical impedance tomography (EIT) is an imaging technique that produces tomographic images of internal impedance changes within an object using surface electrodes. It can be used to image the slow increase in cerebral tissue impedance that occurs over seconds during epileptic seizures, which is attributed to cell swelling due to disturbances in ion homeostasis following hypersynchronous neuronal firing and its associated metabolic demands. In this study, we characterised and imaged this slow impedance response during neocortical and hippocampal epileptiform events in the rat brain and evaluated its relationship to the underlying neural activity. Approach. Neocortical or hippocampal seizures, comprising repeatable series of high-amplitude ictal spikes, were induced by electrically stimulating the sensorimotor cortex or perforant path of rats anaesthetised with fentanyl-isoflurane. Transfer impedances were measured during ≥30 consecutive seizures, by applying a sinusoidal current through independent electrode pairs on an epicortical array, and combined to generate an EIT image of slow activity. Main results. The slow impedance responses were consistently time-matched to the end of seizures and EIT images of this activity were reconstructed reproducibly in all animals (p < 0.03125, N = 5). These displayed foci of activity that were spatially confined to the facial somatosensory cortex and dentate gyrus for neocortical and hippocampal seizures, respectively, and encompassed a larger volume as the seizure progressed. Centre-of-mass analysis of reconstructions revealed that this activity corresponded to the true location of the epileptogenic zone, as determined by EEG recordings and fast neural EIT measurements which were obtained simultaneously. Significance. These findings suggest that the slow impedance response presents a reliable marker of hypersynchronous neuronal activity during epileptic seizures and can thus be utilised for investigating the mechanisms of epileptogenesis in vivo and for aiding localisation of the epileptogenic zone during presurgical evaluation of patients with refractory epilepsies.

AB - Objective. Electrical impedance tomography (EIT) is an imaging technique that produces tomographic images of internal impedance changes within an object using surface electrodes. It can be used to image the slow increase in cerebral tissue impedance that occurs over seconds during epileptic seizures, which is attributed to cell swelling due to disturbances in ion homeostasis following hypersynchronous neuronal firing and its associated metabolic demands. In this study, we characterised and imaged this slow impedance response during neocortical and hippocampal epileptiform events in the rat brain and evaluated its relationship to the underlying neural activity. Approach. Neocortical or hippocampal seizures, comprising repeatable series of high-amplitude ictal spikes, were induced by electrically stimulating the sensorimotor cortex or perforant path of rats anaesthetised with fentanyl-isoflurane. Transfer impedances were measured during ≥30 consecutive seizures, by applying a sinusoidal current through independent electrode pairs on an epicortical array, and combined to generate an EIT image of slow activity. Main results. The slow impedance responses were consistently time-matched to the end of seizures and EIT images of this activity were reconstructed reproducibly in all animals (p < 0.03125, N = 5). These displayed foci of activity that were spatially confined to the facial somatosensory cortex and dentate gyrus for neocortical and hippocampal seizures, respectively, and encompassed a larger volume as the seizure progressed. Centre-of-mass analysis of reconstructions revealed that this activity corresponded to the true location of the epileptogenic zone, as determined by EEG recordings and fast neural EIT measurements which were obtained simultaneously. Significance. These findings suggest that the slow impedance response presents a reliable marker of hypersynchronous neuronal activity during epileptic seizures and can thus be utilised for investigating the mechanisms of epileptogenesis in vivo and for aiding localisation of the epileptogenic zone during presurgical evaluation of patients with refractory epilepsies.

U2 - 10.1088/1361-6579/abd67a

DO - 10.1088/1361-6579/abd67a

M3 - Journal article

VL - 42

JO - Physiological Measurement

JF - Physiological Measurement

SN - 0967-3334

M1 - 014001

ER -