AUDITORY STIMULATION DURING DEEP SLEEP IN CHILDHOOD EPILEPSIES MODULATES NOCTURNAL SPIKE ACTIVITY
University Children's Hospital Zurich
Presentation
Date TBA
Event Information
Poster Board
PS03-08AM-608
Poster
View posterAbstract
Phase-targeted auditory stimulation during NREM sleep consists of playing short, non-arousing tones phase-locked to the ongoing slow waves. Depending on stimulation parameters the tones either interact with global or local brain networks. This offers a non-invasive approach to selectively manipulate sleep oscillations and probe their interaction with epileptic spikes.
Cluster-based permutation statistics across time showed that in 10 patients (age range: 7.3 – 16.2) isolated auditory stimuli induced global high-amplitude slow waves (p = .028) followed by spindles (p = .042) and were accompanied by a transient increase in spike rate (p = .035). In contrast, repetitive down-phase stimulation was associated with a significant local reduction in spike rate (p = .047) and showed no significant effect on slow waves and spindles.
These findings demonstrate an interaction between epileptic spikes and physiological oscillations during NREM sleep; globally induced synchronisation leads to a spike increase, whereas local desynchronisation leads to a spike reduction. This framework may provide a rational basis for targeted interventions aimed at reducing SWAS and its cognitive consequences.
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