(Press-News.org) Brigham researchers mapped lesions related to epilepsy to a common brain circuit
This study points to a novel role of deep brain circuits in the cause and control of epilepsy
New findings highlight the possibility of using this brain circuit to guide brain stimulation treatments for epilepsy
Focal epilepsy affects over 30 million patients worldwide and is commonly caused by brain lesions, such as stroke. However, it is unclear why some lesion locations cause epilepsy while others do not. A new study by investigators from the Brigham and Women’s Hospital, a founding member of the Mass General Brigham healthcare system, found that a common brain circuit may link different lesion locations causing epilepsy. In a paper published in JAMA Neurology, the researchers used a technique called lesion network mapping to identify this brain circuit with findings that point to potential targets for brain stimulation.
“We're learning more and more about where in the brain epilepsy comes from and what brain circuits we need to modulate to treat patients with epilepsy,” said lead author Frederic Schaper, MD, PhD, an Instructor of Neurology at Harvard Medical School and scientist at the Brigham and Women’s Center for Brain Circuit Therapeutics. “Using a wiring diagram of the human brain, lesion network mapping allows us to look beyond the individual lesion location and map its connected brain circuit.”
Schaper and the team studied 5 datasets of over 1,500 patients with brain lesions. Participating centers across the US and Europe included the Brigham and Women’s Hospital, Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston Children’s Hospital, Northwestern University, and University Hospitals of Turku in Finland, Maastricht in the Netherlands, and Barcelona in Spain. They studied a variety of brain lesions such as stroke, trauma, and tumors, which allowed them to search for common network connections associated with epilepsy across different regions and types of brain damage.
One of the datasets included combat veterans from the Vietnam Head Injury Study, which was originally designed in the 1960s because brain damage from combat shrapnel wounds resulted in a significant increase in the occurrence of epilepsy.
“In our studies, up to 50 percent of Vietnam combat veterans suffered at least one seizure post-injury, sometimes many years after the injury,” said co-author Jordan Grafman, Ph.D. of the Shirley Ryan AbilityLab in Chicago. “However, it has remained unclear why lesions to some locations cause epilepsy and others don’t.”
The Brigham researchers compared the locations of brain damage in patients that developed epilepsy to patients that did not, and found that lesions associated with epilepsy were distributed throughout the brain. However, these same lesion locations were connected to a common brain network, suggesting the brain connections disrupted by the lesions, rather than the locations of the lesions itself, were the key.
These findings may have clinical implications for predicting the risk of epilepsy after brain damage.
“If we can map a lesion to the brain network we identified, we may be able to estimate how likely someone is to get epilepsy after a stroke,” Schaper said. “This is not a clinical tool yet, but we lay the groundwork for future studies investigating the use of human brain networks to predict epilepsy risk.”
The key brain connections they identified were not on the brain’s surface but were located deep within the brain in regions called the basal ganglia and cerebellum. The authors state that for decades, these deep brain structures have shown to modulate and control seizures in animal models of epilepsy and are hypothesized to act like a brain “brake”.
Based on these findings, the researchers analyzed outcome data of 30 patients with drug resistant epilepsy who underwent deep brain stimulation (DBS) to treat seizures. They found that patients did a lot better if the DBS site was connected to the same brain network, they identified using brain lesions.
“When programming a DBS electrode to improve seizures, it's hard to know which spot to stimulate because it can take months before the patient’s seizures improve” said senior author Michael Fox, MD, PhD, an Associate Professor of Neurology at Harvard Medical School and founding director of the Brigham and Women’s Center for Brain Circuit Therapeutics. “Identifying this brain circuit for epilepsy may help us target the right spot to improve patient outcomes.”
The authors note that the current study was a retrospective analysis using existing datasets and a wiring diagram of healthy individuals. When available, future studies could use a patients’ wiring diagram and prospectively test the utility of this circuit as a clinical tool.
“Now we know more about what brain circuits may play a role in both the cause and control of epilepsy, this opens up promising opportunities to guide our therapies” said Schaper. “Future clinical trials are needed to determine if this circuit can effectively guide brain stimulation treatment for epilepsy and benefit patients”.
Funding: The present analysis was funded by grants from the American Epilepsy Society (grant no. 846534) and NIH (grant no. R01NS127892). FLWVJS was supported by grants from the Royal Netherlands Academy of Arts and Sciences, Dr. Jan Meerwaldt Stichting, and Stichting De Drie Lichten. MDF was supported by the NIH (grant nos. R01NS127892, R01MH113929, R21MH126271, R56AG069086, R21NS123813), Sidney R. Baer Jr Foundation, the Nancy Lurie Marks Foundation, the Kaye Family Research Fund, the Ellison / Baszucki Foundation, and the Mather’s Foundation.
Disclosures: MDF and SHS are scientific consultants for Magnus Medical and independently own patents on using brain connectivity to guide brain stimulation. The full list of disclosures is available in the paper.
Paper cited: Frederic L.W.V.J. Schaper, et al. “Mapping Lesion-Related Epilepsy to a Human Brain Network” JAMA Neurology DOI: 10.1001/jamaneurol.2023.1988
END
New brain circuit for epilepsy uncovered
Brigham researchers mapped lesions related to epilepsy to a common brain circuit
2023-07-03
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
Associations of food insecurity and memory function among middle to older–age adults
2023-07-03
About The Study: Food insecurity was associated with slightly faster memory decline among middle to older–age individuals, suggesting possible long-term negative cognitive function outcomes associated with exposure to food insecurity in older age.
Authors: Adina Zeki Al Hazzouri, Ph.D., of Columbia University in New York, is the corresponding author.
To access the embargoed study: Visit our For The Media website at this link https://media.jamanetwork.com/
(doi:10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2023.21474)
Editor’s ...
Trends in state-level maternal mortality by racial and ethnic group
2023-07-03
About The Study: While maternal mortality remains unacceptably high among all racial and ethnic groups in the U.S., American Indian and Alaska Native and Black individuals are at increased risk, particularly in several states where these inequities had not been previously highlighted. Maternal mortality persists as a source of worsening disparities in many U.S. states and prevention efforts during this study period (1999 to 2019) appear to have had a limited impact in addressing this health crisis.
Authors: Gregory A. ...
Global, regional, and national epidemiology of diabetes in children
2023-07-03
About The Study: Childhood diabetes is an increasing global health challenge with rising incidence. Results of this study suggest that despite the global decline in deaths and disability-adjusted life-years (DALYs), the number of deaths and DALYs remains high among children with diabetes, especially in low Sociodemographic Index regions. Improved understanding of the epidemiology of diabetes in children may facilitate prevention and control.
Authors: Xiaodong Sun, M.D., Ph.D., and Ningning Hou, M.D., of the Affiliated Hospital of Weifang Medical ...
Trends in mortality from poisonings, firearms, and all other injuries by intent
2023-07-03
About The Study: The results of this study suggest that from 1999 to 2020, death rates due to poisonings, firearms, and all other injuries increased substantially in the U.S. The rapid increase in deaths due to unintentional poisonings and firearm homicides is a national emergency that requires urgent public health interventions at the local and national levels.
Authors: Wayne R. Lawrence, Dr.P.H., of the National Institutes of Health in Bethesda, Maryland, is the corresponding author.
To ...
Preventing stroke disability in a community with high rate of poverty
2023-07-03
· Use of successful medications to break up blood clots rose from 4% to 14% due to new approach
Suspected stroke victims now bypass emergency room for CT scanner and nurse stroke experts, who support patient care team
Community educators went to beauty and barber shops, churches and water distribution centers to deliver stroke-awareness talks
Approach can be duplicated by other communities to improve treatment
CHICAGO --- The use of thrombolysis, medications to break up blood clots, for acute ischemic stroke reduces post-stroke disability, but it is underutilized. This particularly affects Black individuals, who experience ...
Everything in balance? How a molecular switch controls lipid metabolism
2023-07-03
Our body’s fat metabolism plays a vital role in energy production in our body. A research team at the University of Basel, Switzerland, has discovered a molecular switch that regulates lipid metabolism in our cells. This switch controls the storage or conversion of lipids into energy.
All organisms need energy to live. We get energy from various components of our food. Our body uses a part of this energy directly and stores the rest. While glucose serves as an immediately available energy source, fats are stored as energy reserve in form of lipid droplets within our cells.
When the body needs energy from these fat stores, lipids are transported ...
AI and CRISPR precisely control gene expression
2023-07-03
Artificial intelligence can predict on- and off-target activity of CRISPR tools that target RNA instead of DNA, according to new research published in Nature Biotechnology.
The study by researchers at New York University, Columbia Engineering, and the New York Genome Center, combines a deep learning model with CRISPR screens to control the expression of human genes in different ways—such as flicking a light switch to shut them off completely or by using a dimmer knob to partially turn down their activity. These precise gene controls could be used to develop new CRISPR-based therapies.
CRISPR is a gene ...
Older frail patients have a 1-in-3 chance of surviving CPR during surgery
2023-07-03
It’s estimated that around 25% of patients who have a cardiac arrest and receive cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) in a normal hospital setting will survive. Those odds shoot up to 50% for patients who receive CPR during or in the immediate period following surgery, where they are closely monitored by specialists who know their medical history and can intervene without delay. But it’s unclear whether that trend applies to frail patients, who are often older and at a higher risk of experiencing CPR-related trauma and complications. Such uncertainty has led some doctors ...
Transplantation of genome-edited iPS cells delivers therapeutic molecules in vivo
2023-07-03
Induced pluripotent stem (iPS) cells have a great impact on biology and medicine, and they are expected to improve regenerative medicine. Since 2014 when a sheet of retinal pigment epithelial cells derived from iPS cells was transplanted into patients with age-related macular degeneration, clinical trials have been conducted with various cell types derived from iPS cells. While iPS cells derived from healthy individuals have been used so far, it is expected that transplantation therapy using iPS cells can be enhanced through genetic modification in the future.
Therefore, we addressed this possibility by utilizing a Fabry disease mouse model, ...
A spatiotemporal intelligent framework and experimental platform for urban digital twins
2023-07-03
Research Background
The era of Big Data features intelligence, ubiquity, and interconnection of all things. It comes with other advanced information technologies, such as the Internet, Cloud Computing (CC), Internet of Things (IoT), and Artificial Intelligence (AI) . Human society has also gradually entered the Ternary Space from the Binary Space. That is, from the Social Space (the sum of human behavior and social activities) to the Information Space (the computer, Internet, and data information built on physical space and social space) . The Ternary Space maps and digitally connect the urban physical and social ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
Tigers in the neighborhood: How India makes room for both tigers and people
Grove School’s Arthur Paul Pedersen publishes critical essay on scientific measurement literacy
Moffitt study finds key biomarker to predict KRASG12C inhibitor effectiveness in lung cancer
Improving blood transfusion monitoring in critical care patients: Insights from diffuse optics
Powerful legal and financial services enable kleptocracy, research shows
Carbon capture from constructed wetlands declines as they age
UCLA-led study establishes link between early side effects from prostate cancer radiation and long-term side effects
Life cycles of some insects adapt well to a changing climate. Others, not so much.
With generative AI, MIT chemists quickly calculate 3D genomic structures
The gut-brain connection in Alzheimer’s unveiled with X-rays
NIH-funded clinical trial will evaluate new dengue therapeutic
Sound is a primary issue in the lives of skateboarders, study shows
Watch what you eat: NFL game advertisements promote foods high in fat, sodium
Red Dress Collection Concert hosted by Sharon Stone kicks off American Heart Month
One of the largest studies on preterm birth finds a maternal biomarker test significantly reduces neonatal morbidities and improves neonatal outcomes
One of the largest studies of its kind finds early intervention with iron delivered intravenously during pregnancy is a safe and effective treatment for anemia
New Case Western Reserve University study identifies key protein’s role in psoriasis
First-ever ethics checklist for portable MRI brain researchers
Addressing 3D effects of clouds for significant improvements of climate models
Gut microbes may mediate the link between drinking sugary beverages and diabetes risk
Ribosomes team up in difficult situations, new technology shows
Mortality trends among adults ages 25-44 in the US
Discontinuation and reinitiation of dual-labeled GLP-1 receptor agonists among us adults with overweight or obesity
Ultraprocessed food consumption and obesity development in Canadian children
Experts publish framework for global adoption of digital health in medical education
Canadian preschoolers get nearly half of daily calories from ultra-processed foods: University of Toronto study
City of Hope scientists identify mechanism for self-repair of the thymus, a crucial component of the immune system
New study reveals how reduced rainfall threatens plant diversity
New study reveals optimized in vitro fertilization techniques to boost coral restoration efforts in the Caribbean
No evidence that maternal sickness during pregnancy causes autism
[Press-News.org] New brain circuit for epilepsy uncoveredBrigham researchers mapped lesions related to epilepsy to a common brain circuit