4.5 Article

Structural Connectivity Alterations in Operculo-Insular Epilepsy

Journal

BRAIN SCIENCES
Volume 11, Issue 8, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/brainsci11081041

Keywords

epilepsy; insula; operculum; connectome; diffusion magnetic resonance imaging; tractography

Categories

Funding

  1. Quebec Bio-Imaging Network [5886]
  2. Canadian Institute of Health Research [MOP-BSC343410-97930-DLGNH]
  3. Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada [RGPIN-2016-05216N]
  4. Universite de Sherbrooke Institutional Chair in Neuroinformatics
  5. Savoy Foundation
  6. Fonds de Recherche du Quebec-Sante [277581]

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Operculo-insular epilepsy (OIE) is a condition that can mimic temporal and extratemporal epilepsies and often involves increased connectivity strength between certain brain regions. The study proposed a cutting-edge method that revealed widespread connectivity alterations in the OIE group, indicating a diffuse epileptic network within the brain. Graph theoretic analyses showed higher connectivity within insular subregions of OIE patients compared to those with temporal lobe epilepsy.
Operculo-insular epilepsy (OIE) is an under-recognized condition that can mimic temporal and extratemporal epilepsies. Previous studies have revealed structural connectivity changes in the epileptic network of focal epilepsy. However, most reports use the debated streamline-count to quantify 'connectivity strength' and rely on standard tracking algorithms. We propose a sophisticated cutting-edge method that is robust to crossing fibers, optimizes cortical coverage, and assigns an accurate microstructure-reflecting quantitative conectivity marker, namely the COMMIT (Convex Optimization Modeling for Microstructure Informed Tractography)-weight. Using our pipeline, we report the connectivity alterations in OIE. COMMIT-weighted matrices were created in all participants (nine patients with OIE, eight patients with temporal lobe epilepsy (TLE), and 22 healthy controls (HC)). In the OIE group, widespread increases in 'connectivity strength' were observed bilaterally. In OIE patients, 'hyperconnections' were observed between the insula and the pregenual cingulate gyrus (OIE group vs. HC group) and between insular subregions (OIE vs. TLE). Graph theoretic analyses revealed higher connectivity within insular subregions of OIE patients (OIE vs. TLE). We reveal, for the first time, the structural connectivity distribution in OIE. The observed pattern of connectivity in OIE likely reflects a diffuse epileptic network incorporating insular-connected regions and may represent a structural signature and diagnostic biomarker.

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