Increased interictal synchronicity of respiratory related brain pulsations in epilepsy

J Cereb Blood Flow Metab. 2022 Oct;42(10):1840-1853. doi: 10.1177/0271678X221099703. Epub 2022 May 14.

Abstract

Respiratory brain pulsations have recently been shown to drive electrophysiological brain activity in patients with epilepsy. Furthermore, functional neuroimaging indicates that respiratory brain pulsations have increased variability and amplitude in patients with epilepsy compared to healthy individuals. To determine whether the respiratory drive is altered in epilepsy, we compared respiratory brain pulsation synchronicity between healthy controls and patients. Whole brain fast functional magnetic resonance imaging was performed on 40 medicated patients with focal epilepsy, 20 drug-naïve patients and 102 healthy controls. Cerebrospinal fluid associated respiratory pulsations were used to generate individual whole brain respiratory synchronization maps, which were compared between groups. Finally, we analyzed the seizure frequency effect and diagnostic accuracy of the respiratory synchronization defect in epilepsy. Respiratory brain pulsations related to the verified fourth ventricle pulsations were significantly more synchronous in patients in frontal, periventricular and mid-temporal regions, while the seizure frequency correlated positively with synchronicity. The respiratory brain synchronicity had a good diagnostic accuracy (ROCAUC = 0.75) in discriminating controls from medicated patients. The elevated respiratory brain synchronicity in focal epilepsy suggests altered physiological effect of cerebrospinal fluid pulsations possibly linked to regional brain water dynamics involved with interictal brain physiology.

Keywords: Brain physiology; brain pulsations; epilepsy; fast fMRI; respiratory synchronization.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Brain / blood supply
  • Electroencephalography / methods
  • Epilepsies, Partial* / diagnostic imaging
  • Epilepsy* / diagnostic imaging
  • Humans
  • Magnetic Resonance Imaging / methods
  • Seizures
  • Water

Substances

  • Water