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Flexible, high-resolution cortical arrays with large coverage capture microscale high-frequency oscillations in patients with epilepsy.

Authors :
Barth KJ
Sun J
Chiang CH
Qiao S
Wang C
Rahimpour S
Trumpis M
Duraivel S
Dubey A
Wingel KE
Voinas AE
Ferrentino B
Doyle W
Southwell DG
Haglund MM
Vestal M
Harward SC
Solzbacher F
Devore S
Devinsky O
Friedman D
Pesaran B
Sinha SR
Cogan GB
Blanco J
Viventi J
Source :
Epilepsia [Epilepsia] 2023 Jul; Vol. 64 (7), pp. 1910-1924. Date of Electronic Publication: 2023 May 17.
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

Objective: Effective surgical treatment of drug-resistant epilepsy depends on accurate localization of the epileptogenic zone (EZ). High-frequency oscillations (HFOs) are potential biomarkers of the EZ. Previous research has shown that HFOs often occur within submillimeter areas of brain tissue and that the coarse spatial sampling of clinical intracranial electrode arrays may limit the accurate capture of HFO activity. In this study, we sought to characterize microscale HFO activity captured on thin, flexible microelectrocorticographic (μECoG) arrays, which provide high spatial resolution over large cortical surface areas.<br />Methods: We used novel liquid crystal polymer thin-film μECoG arrays (.76-1.72-mm intercontact spacing) to capture HFOs in eight intraoperative recordings from seven patients with epilepsy. We identified ripple (80-250 Hz) and fast ripple (250-600 Hz) HFOs using a common energy thresholding detection algorithm along with two stages of artifact rejection. We visualized microscale subregions of HFO activity using spatial maps of HFO rate, signal-to-noise ratio, and mean peak frequency. We quantified the spatial extent of HFO events by measuring covariance between detected HFOs and surrounding activity. We also compared HFO detection rates on microcontacts to simulated macrocontacts by spatially averaging data.<br />Results: We found visually delineable subregions of elevated HFO activity within each μECoG recording. Forty-seven percent of HFOs occurred on single 200-μm-diameter recording contacts, with minimal high-frequency activity on surrounding contacts. Other HFO events occurred across multiple contacts simultaneously, with covarying activity most often limited to a .95-mm radius. Through spatial averaging, we estimated that macrocontacts with 2-3-mm diameter would only capture 44% of the HFOs detected in our μECoG recordings.<br />Significance: These results demonstrate that thin-film microcontact surface arrays with both highresolution and large coverage accurately capture microscale HFO activity and may improve the utility of HFOs to localize the EZ for treatment of drug-resistant epilepsy.<br /> (© 2023 International League Against Epilepsy.)

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1528-1167
Volume :
64
Issue :
7
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Epilepsia
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
37150937
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1111/epi.17642