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Human focal seizures are characterized by populations of fixed duration and interval
Author(s) -
Cook Mark J.,
Karoly Philippa J.,
Freestone Dean R.,
Himes David,
Leyde Kent,
Berkovic Samuel,
O'Brien Terence,
Grayden David B.,
Boston Ray
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
epilepsia
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.687
H-Index - 191
eISSN - 1528-1167
pISSN - 0013-9580
DOI - 10.1111/epi.13291
Subject(s) - epilepsy , electroencephalography , subclinical infection , duration (music) , population , ambulatory , psychology , audiology , interval (graph theory) , medicine , neuroscience , mathematics , art , literature , environmental health , combinatorics
Summary Objective We report on a quantitative analysis of data from a study that acquired continuous long‐term ambulatory human electroencephalography ( EEG ) data over extended periods. The objectives were to examine the seizure duration and interseizure interval ( ISI ), their relationship to each other, and the effect of these features on the clinical manifestation of events. Methods Chronic ambulatory intracranial EEG data acquired for the purpose of seizure prediction were analyzed and annotated. A detection algorithm identified potential seizure activity, which was manually confirmed. Events were classified as clinically corroborated, electroencephalographically identical but not clinically corroborated, or subclinical. K‐means cluster analysis supplemented by finite mixture modeling was used to locate groupings of seizure duration and ISI . Results Quantitative analyses confirmed well‐resolved groups of seizure duration and ISIs, which were either mono‐modal or multimodal, and highly subject specific. Subjects with a single population of seizures were linked to improved seizure prediction outcomes. There was a complex relationship between clinically manifest seizures, seizure duration, and interval. Significance These data represent the first opportunity to reliably investigate the statistics of seizure occurrence in a realistic, long‐term setting. The presence of distinct duration groups implies that the evolution of seizures follows a predetermined course. Patterns of seizure activity showed considerable variation between individuals, but were highly predictable within individuals. This finding indicates seizure dynamics are characterized by subject‐specific time scales; therefore, temporal distributions of seizures should also be interpreted on an individual level. Identification of duration and interval subgroups may provide a new avenue for improving seizure prediction.

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