Document Type
Article
Publication Date
2024
Publisher
Nature Publishing Group
Source Publication
Scientific Reports
Source ISSN
2045-2322
Original Item ID
DOI: 10.1038/s41598-024-67120-8
Abstract
Methods to quantify cortical hyperexcitability are of enormous interest for mapping epileptic networks in patients with focal epilepsy. We hypothesize that, in the resting state, cortical hyperexcitability increases firing-rate correlations between neuronal populations within seizure onset zones (SOZs). This hypothesis predicts that in the gamma frequency band (40–200 Hz), amplitude envelope correlations (AECs), a relatively straightforward measure of functional connectivity, should be elevated within SOZs compared to other areas. To test this prediction, we analyzed archived samples of interictal electrocorticographic (ECoG) signals recorded from patients who became seizure-free after surgery targeting SOZs identified by multiday intracranial recordings. We show that in the gamma band, AECs between nodes within SOZs are markedly elevated relative to those elsewhere. AEC-based node strength, eigencentrality, and clustering coefficient are also robustly increased within the SOZ with maxima in the low-gamma band (permutation test Z-scores > 8) and yield moderate discriminability of the SOZ using ROC analysis (maximal mean AUC ~ 0.73). By contrast to AECs, phase locking values (PLVs), a measure of narrow-band phase coupling across sites, and PLV-based graph metrics discriminate the seizure onset nodes weakly. Our results suggest that gamma band AECs may provide a clinically useful marker of cortical hyperexcitability in focal epilepsy.
Creative Commons License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-No Derivative Works 4.0 International License.
Recommended Citation
Raghavan, Manoj; Pilet, Jared; Carlson, Chad; Anderson, Christopher T.; Mueller, Wade; Lew, Sean; Ustine, Candida; Shah-Basak, Priyanka; Youssofzadeh, Vahab; and Beardsley, Scott A., "Gamma Amplitude-Envelope Correlations Are Strongly Elevated within Hyperexcitable Networks in Focal Epilepsy" (2024). Biomedical Engineering Faculty Research and Publications. 680.
https://epublications.marquette.edu/bioengin_fac/680
ADA Accessible Version
Comments
Published version. Scientific Reports, Vol. 14 (2024). DOI. © Nurture Publishing Group (Macmillan Publisher Limited). Used with permission.
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