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A seizures electrographic dynamics are characterised by its spatiotemporal evolution, also termed dynamical pathway and the time it takes to complete that pathway, which results in the seizures duration. Both seizure pathways and durations can vary within the same patient, producing seizures with different dynamics, severity, and clinical implications. However, it is unclear whether seizures following the same pathway will have the same duration or if these features can vary independently. We compared within-subject variability in these seizure features using 1) epilepsy monitoring unit intracranial EEG (iEEG) recordings of 31 patients (mean 6.7 days, 16.5 seizures/subject), 2) NeuroVista chronic iEEG recordings of 10 patients (mean 521.2 days, 252.6 seizures/subject), and 3) chronic iEEG recordings of 3 dogs with focal-onset seizures (mean 324.4 days, 62.3 seizures/subject). While the strength of the relationship between seizure pathways and durations was highly subject-specific, in most subjects, changes in seizure pathways were only weakly to moderately associated with differences in seizure durations. The relationship between seizure pathways and durations was weakened by seizures that 1) had a common pathway, but different durations (elastic pathways), or 2) had similar durations, but followed different pathways (duplicate durations). Even in subjects with distinct populations of short and long seizures, seizure durations were not a reliable indicator of different seizure pathways. These findings suggest that seizure pathways and durations are modulated by different processes. Uncovering such modulators may reveal novel therapeutic targets for reducing seizure duration and severity.
Understanding brain dynamics in epilepsy is critical for establishing rigorous control objectives that enable new therapeutic methods to mitigate seizure occurrence. In multichannel electrocorticography (ECoG) recordings acquired in 21 subjects durin
Epileptic seizure forecasting, combined with the delivery of preventative therapies, holds the potential to greatly improve the quality of life for epilepsy patients and their caregivers. Forecasting seizures could prevent some potentially catastroph
Electroencephalogram (EEG) is a prominent way to measure the brain activity for studying epilepsy, thereby helping in predicting seizures. Seizure prediction is an active research area with many deep learning based approaches dominating the recent li
Objective: To identify if whole-brain structural network alterations in patients with temporal lobe epilepsy (TLE) and focal to bilateral tonic-clonic seizures (FBTCS) differ from alterations in patients without FBTCS. Methods: We dichotomized a co
Automated seizure detection and classification from electroencephalography (EEG) can greatly improve the diagnosis and treatment of seizures. While prior studies mainly used convolutional neural networks (CNNs) that assume image-like structure in EEG