Intracranial EEG structure-function coupling predicts surgical outcomes in focal epilepsy
Nishant Sinha, John S. Duncan, Beate Diehl, Fahmida A. Chowdhury, Jane, de Tisi, Anna Miserocchi, Andrew W. McEvoy, Kathryn A. Davis, Sjoerd B. Vos,, Gavin P. Winston, Yujiang Wang, Peter N. Taylor

TL;DR
This study shows that preoperative intracranial EEG-based structure-function coupling can predict surgical outcomes in focal epilepsy, with stronger coupling indicating a higher likelihood of seizure freedom post-surgery.
Contribution
It introduces a novel approach combining intracranial EEG and imaging data to assess structure-function coupling as a predictor of surgical success in epilepsy.
Findings
Stronger preoperative structure-function coupling correlates with seizure freedom.
Structure-function coupling predicts surgical outcomes with 85% accuracy.
Virtual surgeries help localize epileptogenic tissue and inform surgical planning.
Abstract
Alterations to structural and functional brain networks have been reported across many neurological conditions. However, the relationship between structure and function -- their coupling -- is relatively unexplored, particularly in the context of an intervention. Epilepsy surgery alters the brain structure and networks to control the functional abnormality of seizures. Given that surgery is a structural modification aiming to alter the function, we hypothesized that stronger structure-function coupling preoperatively is associated with a greater chance of post-operative seizure control. We constructed structural and functional brain networks in 39 subjects with medication-resistant focal epilepsy using data from intracranial EEG (pre-surgery), structural MRI (pre-and post-surgery), and diffusion MRI (pre-surgery). We investigated pre-operative structure-function coupling at two spatial…
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Taxonomy
TopicsFunctional Brain Connectivity Studies · Advanced MRI Techniques and Applications · Advanced Neuroimaging Techniques and Applications
MethodsDiffusion
