Epilepsy affects between 0.5 and 0.7% of the European population. Despite the availability of numerous drug treatments, one third of patients still have seizures, which are associated with significant cognitive and social complications and excess mortality. In these patients, surgical treatment to remove the epileptogenic zone (EZ), the region of the brain responsible for seizures, is the only approach that can allow control of the disease. However, before investigating this surgery, investigations have to answer two questions: (i) what is the location and extension of the EZ and (ii) what functional risks, both motor and cognitive, would represent the resection of this Cortical region? As it is a functional surgery, it is in fact inconceivable that the surgery will result in an over-handicap. For these reasons, all candidates for surgery benefit from a complete assessment including imaging examinations, a neuropsychological assessment and a long-term video-EEG recording to record seizures. Nevertheless, in some patients, this assessment does not give us a formal answer. In these subjects, it is then necessary to carry out a second step, consisting of an invasive exploration by implantation of intracerebral electrodes during a stereoencephalography (SEEG). Due to its temporal and spatial resolution, the SEEG allows, besides the precise determination of the EZ, to carry out a functional mapping of the cortical regions likely to be included in cortectomy. Conventionally, this mapping is carried out on the basis of the cortical electrical stimulations applied to the implanted electrodes. If this approach is very robust for exploring primary functions such as motor skills or language, it cannot be used to evaluate more complex cognitive tasks such as face recognition or attention Effective cognitive treatment on a daily basis. This has led to the development in recent years, in Lyon and Grenoble, of a complementary approach to cerebral stimulation: dynamic spectral imaging (ISD). Numerous experimental paradigms have demonstrated that the realization of a cognitive task associates with the generation within the cortical regions involved in its treatment of a particular cortical activity. This activity is characterized by oscillations of the cortical rhythm in high frequencies (\> 30 Hz), called gamma activities. The ISD thus consists in mapping this gamma activity during various cognitive tasks, thus making it possible to study more widely the complexity of the cognitive functions. Correlations between gamma activity and cognitive tasks have so far been exclusively performed in the non-epileptic cortex explored at the periphery of the EA during SEEG. Nevertheless, the cortical oscillatory pattern study associated with a specific cognitive task within the EZ could better anticipate complex cognitive deficits that could be generated by the resection of a cortical region. The main objective of this project is to establish the predictive character of the gamma cortical oscillatory pattern associated with a specific cognitive task on the risk of occurrence of a cognitive disorder after surgery of epilepsy.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
NA
Purpose
DIAGNOSTIC
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
50
cerebral stimulation: dynamic spectral imaging (ISD)
Hospices Civils de Lyon
Bron, France
RECRUITINGpredictive character of the cortical gamma oscillatory pattern associated with a specific cognitive task on the risk of occurrence of a cognitive disorder after epilepsy surgery
Relation between the presence in the epileptogenic zone of a gamma activation in at least 1 of the cognitive tasks performed during the ISD and the occurrence of a postoperative neuropsychological deficit (Wilcoxon test)
Time frame: 12 months post-surgery compare to preoperative assessment (SEEG)
database on the dynamics of large cerebral networks underlying the main cognitive functions
Comparison of mapping of pre-surgical gamma activity with preoperative neu-ropsychological evaluation
Time frame: pre-surgical assessment (SEEG)
spatio-temporal organization of these networks with that predicted by fMRI
Pre-surgical comparison of the performances for the functional cartography of gamma activity performed during SEEG, fMRI and cortical stimulation at preoperative assessment.
Time frame: preoperative assessment (SEEG, fMRI and cortical stimulations)
effect of intracerebral electrical stimulations
Pre-surgical comparison of the performances for the functional cartography of gamma activity performed during SEEG, fMRI and cortical stimulation at preoperative assessment.
Time frame: preoperative assessment (SEEG, fMRI and cortical stimulations)
macro-electrophysiological recordings
The relation between the presence in the epileptogenic zone of an activation in the other frequency bands (theta, alpha, beta) in at least 1 of the cognitive tasks performed during the ISD and the occurrence of a post neuropsychological deficit
Time frame: 12 months post-surgery compare to preoperative assessment (SEEG)
micro-electrophysiological recordings
The relation between the presence in the epileptogenic zone of an activation in the other frequency bands (theta, alpha, beta) in at least 1 of the cognitive tasks performed during the ISD and the occurrence of a post neuropsychological deficit
Time frame: 12 months post-surgery compare to preoperative assessment (SEEG)
Anne-Laure CHARLOIS
CONTACT
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