Active direct current (DC) shifts and "Red slow": two new concepts for seizure mechanisms and identification of the epileptogenic zone

Neurosci Res. 2020 Jul:156:95-101. doi: 10.1016/j.neures.2020.01.014. Epub 2020 Feb 8.

Abstract

An accurate identification of the epileptogenic zone is essential for patients with intractable epilepsy who are candidates to neurosurgery. EEG recordings can provide predictive biomarkers of the epileptogenic zone. Wide-band EEG makes it possible to record from infraslow (including DC shifts) to high frequency (HFO, over 300 Hz) oscillations for diagnostic purposes in patients with epilepsy. Although the presence of HFOs have been proposed to sign the epileptogenic zone, DC-like recordings demonstrate that DC shifts precede HFOs at seizure onset. This led to the proposal that "ictal active DC shifts" are causally related to seizure onset as opposed to "ictal passive DC shifts". Thus, active DC shifts may constitute predictive biomarkers of the epileptogenic zone in epilepsy. Since DC shift is commonly associated to a rise in extracellular potassium, potassium homeostasis regulated by Kir4.1 channels in astrocytes may play an key role at seizure onset. In addition, we hypothesize that, during the interictal period, the co-occurrence of slow events and interictal HFOs, so-called "Red slow", may also delineate an epileptogenic zone, even if a seizure would not be actually recorded.

Keywords: DC shifts; Epilepsy; Glial cells; HFO; Oscillology; Red slow; Seizure.

Publication types

  • Review

MeSH terms

  • Electroencephalography*
  • Epilepsy* / diagnosis
  • Humans
  • Seizures / diagnosis