Neighbourhood topology unveils pathological hubs in the brain networks of epilepsy-surgery patients
Leonardo Di Gaetano, Fernando A N Santos, Federico Battiston, Ginestra Bianconi, Nicolò Defenu, Ida A Nissen, Elisabeth C W van Straaten, Arjan Hillebrand, Ana P Millán

TL;DR
This study shows that seizure-driving brain hubs in epilepsy patients can extend beyond the surgically removed area, with significant differences between individuals.
Contribution
The paper introduces a novel neighborhood-based analysis and generalized centrality metrics to study brain hubs in epilepsy patients.
Findings
Pathological hubs are found in both the resection area and its neighborhood in epilepsy patients.
There is significant variability in hub location across patients, with no correlation to surgical outcomes.
Neighborhood-based analysis reveals new insights into brain connectivity in epilepsy.
Abstract
Pathological hubs in the brain networks of epilepsy patients are hypothesized to drive seizure generation and propagation. In epilepsy-surgery patients, these hubs have traditionally been associated with the resection area (RA): the region removed during the surgery with the goal of stopping the seizures, and which is typically used as a proxy for the epileptogenic zone. However, recent studies hypothesize that pathological hubs may extend to the vicinity of the RA, potentially complicating post-surgical seizure control. Here we propose a neighbourhood-based analysis of brain organization to investigate this hypothesis. We exploit a large dataset of pre-surgical magnetoencephalography-derived whole-brain networks from 91 epilepsy-surgery patients. Our neighbourhood focus is 2-fold. Firstly, we propose a partition of the brain regions into three sets, namely resected nodes, their…
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Taxonomy
TopicsFunctional Brain Connectivity Studies · EEG and Brain-Computer Interfaces · Epilepsy research and treatment
