Connectivity of the Piriform Cortex and its Implications in Temporal Lobe Epilepsy.


Journal

medRxiv : the preprint server for health sciences
Titre abrégé: medRxiv
Pays: United States
ID NLM: 101767986

Informations de publication

Date de publication:
22 Jul 2024
Historique:
medline: 7 8 2024
pubmed: 7 8 2024
entrez: 7 8 2024
Statut: epublish

Résumé

The piriform cortex has been implicated in the initiation, spread and termination of epileptic seizures. This understanding has extended to surgical management of epilepsy, where it has been shown that resection or ablation of the piriform cortex can result in better outcomes. How and why the piriform cortex may play such a crucial role in seizure networks is not well understood. To answer these questions, we investigated the functional and structural connectivity of the piriform cortex in both healthy controls and temporal lobe epilepsy (TLE) patients. We studied a retrospective cohort of 55 drug-resistant unilateral TLE patients and 26 healthy controls who received structural and functional neuroimaging. Using seed-to-voxel connectivity we compared the normative whole-brain connectivity of the piriform to that of the hippocampus, a region commonly involved in epilepsy, to understand the differential contribution of the piriform to the epileptogenic network. We subsequently measured the inter-piriform coupling (IPC) to quantify similarities in the inter-hemispheric cortical functional connectivity profile between the two piriform cortices. We related differences in IPC in TLE back to aberrations in normative piriform connectivity, whole brain functional properties, and structural connectivity. We find that relative to the hippocampus, the piriform is functionally connected to the anterior insula and the rest of the salience ventral attention network (SAN). We also find that low IPC is a sensitive metric of poor surgical outcome (sensitivity: 85.71%, 95% CI: [19.12%, 99.64%]); and differences in IPC within TLE were related to disconnectivity and hyperconnectivity to the anterior insula and the SAN. More globally, we find that low IPC is associated with whole-brain functional and structural segregation, marked by decreased functional small-worldness and fractional anisotropy. Our study presents novel insights into the functional and structural neural network alterations associated with this structure, laying the foundation for future work to carefully consider its connectivity during the presurgical management of epilepsy.

Sections du résumé

Background UNASSIGNED
The piriform cortex has been implicated in the initiation, spread and termination of epileptic seizures. This understanding has extended to surgical management of epilepsy, where it has been shown that resection or ablation of the piriform cortex can result in better outcomes. How and why the piriform cortex may play such a crucial role in seizure networks is not well understood. To answer these questions, we investigated the functional and structural connectivity of the piriform cortex in both healthy controls and temporal lobe epilepsy (TLE) patients.
Methods UNASSIGNED
We studied a retrospective cohort of 55 drug-resistant unilateral TLE patients and 26 healthy controls who received structural and functional neuroimaging. Using seed-to-voxel connectivity we compared the normative whole-brain connectivity of the piriform to that of the hippocampus, a region commonly involved in epilepsy, to understand the differential contribution of the piriform to the epileptogenic network. We subsequently measured the inter-piriform coupling (IPC) to quantify similarities in the inter-hemispheric cortical functional connectivity profile between the two piriform cortices. We related differences in IPC in TLE back to aberrations in normative piriform connectivity, whole brain functional properties, and structural connectivity.
Results UNASSIGNED
We find that relative to the hippocampus, the piriform is functionally connected to the anterior insula and the rest of the salience ventral attention network (SAN). We also find that low IPC is a sensitive metric of poor surgical outcome (sensitivity: 85.71%, 95% CI: [19.12%, 99.64%]); and differences in IPC within TLE were related to disconnectivity and hyperconnectivity to the anterior insula and the SAN. More globally, we find that low IPC is associated with whole-brain functional and structural segregation, marked by decreased functional small-worldness and fractional anisotropy.
Conclusions UNASSIGNED
Our study presents novel insights into the functional and structural neural network alterations associated with this structure, laying the foundation for future work to carefully consider its connectivity during the presurgical management of epilepsy.

Identifiants

pubmed: 39108505
doi: 10.1101/2024.07.21.24310778
pmc: PMC11302608
pii:
doi:

Types de publication

Journal Article Preprint

Langues

eng

Auteurs

Classifications MeSH