Focal Sleep Spindle Deficits Reveal Focal Thalamocortical Dysfunction and Predict Cognitive Deficits in Sleep Activated Developmental Epilepsy

Childhood epilepsy with centrotemporal spikes (CECTS) is the most common focal epilepsy syndrome, yet the cause of this disease remains unknown. Now recognized as a mild epileptic encephalopathy, children exhibit sleep-activated focal epileptiform discharges and cognitive difficulties during the act...

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Published inThe Journal of neuroscience Vol. 41; no. 8; pp. 1816 - 1829
Main Authors Kramer, Mark A, Stoyell, Sally M, Chinappen, Dhinakaran, Ostrowski, Lauren M, Spencer, Elizabeth R, Morgan, Amy K, Emerton, Britt Carlson, Jing, Jin, Westover, M Brandon, Eden, Uri T, Stickgold, Robert, Manoach, Dara S, Chu, Catherine J
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published United States Society for Neuroscience 24.02.2021
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Summary:Childhood epilepsy with centrotemporal spikes (CECTS) is the most common focal epilepsy syndrome, yet the cause of this disease remains unknown. Now recognized as a mild epileptic encephalopathy, children exhibit sleep-activated focal epileptiform discharges and cognitive difficulties during the active phase of the disease. The association between the abnormal electrophysiology and sleep suggests disruption to thalamocortical circuits. Thalamocortical circuit dysfunction resulting in pathologic epileptiform activity could hinder the production of sleep spindles, a brain rhythm essential for memory processes. Despite this pathophysiologic connection, the relationship between spindles and cognitive symptoms in epileptic encephalopathies has not been previously evaluated. A significant challenge limiting such work has been the poor performance of available automated spindle detection methods in the setting of sharp activities, such as epileptic spikes. Here, we validate a robust new method to accurately measure sleep spindles in patients with epilepsy. We then apply this detector to a prospective cohort of male and female children with CECTS with combined high-density EEGs during sleep and cognitive testing at varying time points of disease. We show that: (1) children have a transient, focal deficit in spindles during the symptomatic phase of disease; (2) spindle rate anticorrelates with spike rate; and (3) spindle rate, but not spike rate, predicts performance on cognitive tasks. These findings demonstrate focal thalamocortical circuit dysfunction and provide a pathophysiological explanation for the shared seizures and cognitive symptoms in CECTS. Further, this work identifies sleep spindles as a potential treatment target of cognitive dysfunction in this common epileptic encephalopathy. Childhood epilepsy with centrotemporal spikes is the most common idiopathic focal epilepsy syndrome, characterized by self-limited focal seizures and cognitive symptoms. Here, we provide the first evidence that focal thalamocortical circuit dysfunction underlies the shared seizures and cognitive dysfunction observed. In doing so, we identify sleep spindles as a mechanistic biomarker, and potential treatment target, of cognitive dysfunction in this common developmental epilepsy and provide a novel method to reliably quantify spindles in brain recordings from patients with epilepsy.
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Author contributions: M.A.K., S.M.S., D.C., L.M.O., A.K.M., B.C.E., and C.J.C. performed research; M.A.K., D.C., E.R.S., U.T.E., and C.J.C. analyzed data; M.A.K. and C.J.C. wrote the first draft of the paper; M.A.K., S.M.S., D.C., L.M.O., E.R.S., A.K.M., B.C.E., R.S., D.S.M., and C.J.C. edited the paper; M.A.K. and C.J.C. wrote the paper; J.J., M.B.W., R.S., and D.S.M. contributed unpublished reagents/analytic tools; C.J.C. designed research.
ISSN:0270-6474
1529-2401
DOI:10.1523/JNEUROSCI.2009-20.2020