Stereoelectroencephalography

Stereoelectroencephalography (SEEG) is the practice of recording electroencephalographic signals via depth electrodes (electrodes surgically implanted into the brain tissue). It may be used in patients with epilepsy not responding to medical treatment, and who are potential candidates to receive brain surgery in order to control seizures. It may also be used in research to collect neural data from specific regions of the brain, such as from the auditory cortex for auditory stimulus reconstruction.[1]

This technique was introduced in the diagnostic work up of patients with epilepsy by the group of the S. Anne Hospital, Paris, France, in the second half of the 20th century.[2] Intracerebral electrodes are placed within the desired brain areas to record the electrical activity during epileptic seizures, thus contributing to define with accuracy the boundaries of the "epileptogenic zone", i.e. the area of brain generating the seizures which should be eventually surgically resected to achieve freedom from epileptic seizures. Potential risks of the procedure, accounting for less than 1% of cases, include brain hemorrhage and infection, which can lead to permanent neurological impairment or death. For this reason, stereoelectroencephalography is reserved to selected and particularly complicated epilepsy cases.[3]

References

  1. H. Akbari, B. Khalighinejad, J. Herrero, A. Mehta, and N. Mesgarani, “Reconstructing intelligible speech from the human auditory cortex,” bioRxiv, Jan. 2018.
  2. Talairach J, Bancaud J, Szikla G, et al. Approche nouvelle de la neurochirugie de l’epilepsie. Méthodologie stérérotaxique et résultats thérapeutiques. Neurochirurgie (1974) 20 (Suppl. 1): 1-240.
  3. Cossu M, Cardinale F, Castana L, et al. Stereo-EEG in the presurgical evaluation of focal epilepsy: a retrospective analysis of 215 procedures. Neurosurgery (2005) 57: 706-718.
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