4.7 Article

Neuronal synchrony abnormalities associated with subclinical epileptiform activity in early-onset Alzheimer's disease

Journal

BRAIN
Volume 145, Issue 2, Pages 744-753

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/brain/awab442

Keywords

network hyperexcitability; epileptiform activity in Alzheimer's disease; magnetoencephalography; neuronal synchrony; imaginary coherence

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [K08AG058749, F32AG050434-01A1, K23 AG038357, P50-AG023501, R01NS100440, R01DC017091, R01AG062196]
  2. John Douglas French Alzheimer's Foundation
  3. Larry L. Hillblom Foundation [2015-A-034-FEL, 2019-A-013-SUP]
  4. Alzheimer's Association [PCTRB-13-288476]
  5. CloudTM [ETAC-09-133596]
  6. Ricoh MEG Inc.

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Patients with Alzheimer's disease with subclinical epileptiform activity show altered neuronal synchrony, which can be accurately quantified using resting-state magnetoencephalography. These quantitative neurophysiological measures can serve as biomarkers to improve diagnosis and select appropriate patients for therapy.
Since the first demonstrations of network hyperexcitability in scientific models of Alzheimer's disease, a growing body of clinical studies have identified subclinical epileptiform activity and associated cognitive decline in patients with Alzheimer's disease. An obvious problem presented in these studies is lack of sensitive measures to detect and quantify network hyperexcitability in human subjects. In this study we examined whether altered neuronal synchrony can be a surrogate marker to quantify network hyperexcitability in patients with Alzheimer's disease. Using magnetoencephalography (MEG) at rest, we studied 30 Alzheimer's disease patients without subclinical epileptiform activity, 20 Alzheimer's disease patients with subclinical epileptiform activity and 35 age-matched controls. Presence of subclinical epileptiform activity was assessed in patients with Alzheimer's disease by long-term video-EEG and a 1-h resting MEG with simultaneous EEG. Using the resting-state source-space reconstructed MEG signal, in patients and controls we computed the global imaginary coherence in alpha (8-12 Hz) and delta-theta (2-8 Hz) oscillatory frequencies. We found that Alzheimer's disease patients with subclinical epileptiform activity have greater reductions in alpha imaginary coherence and greater enhancements in delta-theta imaginary coherence than Alzheimer's disease patients without subclinical epileptiform activity, and that these changes can distinguish between Alzheimer's disease patients with subclinical epileptiform activity and Alzheimer's disease patients without subclinical epileptiform activity with high accuracy. Finally, a principal component regression analysis showed that the variance of frequency-specific neuronal synchrony predicts longitudinal changes in Mini-Mental State Examination in patients and controls. Our results demonstrate that quantitative neurophysiological measures are sensitive biomarkers of network hyperexcitability and can be used to improve diagnosis and to select appropriate patients for the right therapy in the next-generation clinical trials. The current results provide an integrative framework for investigating network hyperexcitability and network dysfunction together with cognitive and clinical correlates in patients with Alzheimer's disease. Ranasinghe et al. use MEG and measures of long-range synchrony to distinguish between patients with Alzheimer's disease with and without subclinical epileptiform activity. The results show that frequency-specific neurophysiological measures are promising biomarkers of network hyperexcitability in Alzheimer's disease.

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