TY - JOUR
T1 - Analysis of the EEG-fMRI response to prolonged bursts of interictal epileptiform activity
AU - Bagshaw, Andrew
AU - Hawco, C
AU - Benar, C-G
PY - 2005/2/15
Y1 - 2005/2/15
N2 - The use of combined EEG-fMRI to study interictal epileptiform activity is increasing and has great potential as a clinical tool, but the haemodynamic response to epileptiform activity remains incompletely characterised. To this end, 19 data sets from 14 patients with prolonged bursts of focal or generalised interictal epileptiform activity lasting up to 15 s were analysed. To determine whether the inclusion of the durations of the epileptic events in the general linear model resulted in increased statistical significance of activated regions, statistical maps were generated with and without the event durations. The mean differences when including the durations were a 14.5% increase in peak t value and a 29.5% increase in volume of activation. This suggests that when analysing EEG-fMRI data from patients with prolonged bursts of interictal epileptiform activity, it is better to include the event durations. To determine whether the amplitudes and latencies of the measured responses were consistent with the general linear model, the haemodynamic response functions for bursts of different durations were calculated and compared with the model predictions. The measured amplitude of the response to the shortest duration events was consistently larger than predicted, which is consistent with studies in normal subjects. For the two data sets with the widest range of event durations, the measured amplitudes increased with the durations of the events without evidence of the plateau that was expected from the general linear model. There were no consistent differences between the measured and modelled latencies.
AB - The use of combined EEG-fMRI to study interictal epileptiform activity is increasing and has great potential as a clinical tool, but the haemodynamic response to epileptiform activity remains incompletely characterised. To this end, 19 data sets from 14 patients with prolonged bursts of focal or generalised interictal epileptiform activity lasting up to 15 s were analysed. To determine whether the inclusion of the durations of the epileptic events in the general linear model resulted in increased statistical significance of activated regions, statistical maps were generated with and without the event durations. The mean differences when including the durations were a 14.5% increase in peak t value and a 29.5% increase in volume of activation. This suggests that when analysing EEG-fMRI data from patients with prolonged bursts of interictal epileptiform activity, it is better to include the event durations. To determine whether the amplitudes and latencies of the measured responses were consistent with the general linear model, the haemodynamic response functions for bursts of different durations were calculated and compared with the model predictions. The measured amplitude of the response to the shortest duration events was consistently larger than predicted, which is consistent with studies in normal subjects. For the two data sets with the widest range of event durations, the measured amplitudes increased with the durations of the events without evidence of the plateau that was expected from the general linear model. There were no consistent differences between the measured and modelled latencies.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=12844279379&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/j.neuroimage.2004.10.010
DO - 10.1016/j.neuroimage.2004.10.010
M3 - Article
C2 - 15670687
SN - 1095-9572
VL - 24
SP - 1099
EP - 1112
JO - NeuroImage
JF - NeuroImage
ER -