Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
6013543 | Epilepsy & Behavior | 2012 | 6 Pages |
Abstract
Interictal spike activity arising from an epileptic focus may cause transient subclinical changes in language function. We retrospectively studied four patients with a seizure focus of the left frontal lobe who underwent language mapping via electrocorticography. In three patients, we could group language task trials into 'spike' and 'non-spike' trials, based upon occurrence of spikes arising from the seizure onset zone during presentation of question stimuli. In one patient, we demonstrated a reduction in language-related gamma activity (80-100Â Hz) at one dorsal superior frontal site outside the seizure onset zone; reduction in mean peak amplitude of 58.4% of baseline reference (95% C.I.: 31.6% to 85.1%). This site was located near the seizure onset zone and was associated with the greatest spike rate among sites of similar function. This is the first preliminary study to show an effect of interictal spikes upon language-related gamma activity of the lateral frontal lobe.
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Authors
Erik C. Brown, Naoyuki Matsuzaki, Eishi Asano,