In adults, partial epilepsy is more difficult to treat than idiopathic generalized epilepsy. In patients who have partial epilepsy, the location of the epileptogenic zone does not seem to be a determining factor. Brain abnormalities--especially HS, either alone or associated with another lesion--are a major prognostic factor.
We compared conscious and nonconscious processing of briefly flashed words using a visual masking procedure while recording intracranial electroencephalogram (iEEG) in ten patients. Nonconscious processing of masked words was observed in multiple cortical areas, mostly within an early time window (<300 ms), accompanied by induced gamma-band activity, but without coherent long-distance neural activity, suggesting a quickly dissipating feedforward wave. In contrast, conscious processing of unmasked words was characterized by the convergence of four distinct neurophysiological markers: sustained voltage changes, particularly in prefrontal cortex, large increases in spectral power in the gamma band, increases in long-distance phase synchrony in the beta range, and increases in long-range Granger causality. We argue that all of those measures provide distinct windows into the same distributed state of conscious processing. These results have a direct impact on current theoretical discussions concerning the neural correlates of conscious access.
Mechanisms involved in the transition to an epileptic seizure remain unclear. We studied this question in tissue slices from human subjects with mesial temporal lobe epilepsies. Ictal-like discharges were induced in the subiculum by increasing excitability together with an alkalinization or low Mg 2+ . During the transition, distinct pre-ictal discharges emerged concurrently with interictal events. Intracranial recordings from the mesial temporal cortex of epileptic subjects revealed similar discharges before seizures were restricted to seizure onset sites. In vitro, pre-ictal events spread faster, have a larger amplitude and a distinct initiation site than interictal discharges. They depend on glutamatergic mechanisms and are preceded by pyramidal cell firing, while interneuron firing precedes interictal events which depend on both glutamatergic and depolarizing GABAergic transmission. Once established, recurrence of these pre-ictal discharges triggers seizures. Thus the subiculum supports seizure generation and the transition to seizure involves a novel, emergent glutamatergic population activity.3
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