Perspectives on Understanding Aberrant Brain Networks in Epilepsy

Nishant Sinha, Rasesh B. Joshi, Mani Ratnesh S. Sandhu, Theoden I. Netoff, Hitten P. Zaveri, Klaus Lehnertz

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

7 Scopus citations

Abstract

Epilepsy is a neurological disorder affecting approximately 70 million people worldwide. It is characterized by seizures that are complex aberrant dynamical events typically treated with drugs and surgery. Unfortunately, not all patients become seizure-free, and there is an opportunity for novel approaches to treat epilepsy using a network view of the brain. The traditional seizure focus theory presumed that seizures originated within a discrete cortical area with subsequent recruitment of adjacent cortices with seizure progression. However, a more recent view challenges this concept, suggesting that epilepsy is a network disease, and both focal and generalized seizures arise from aberrant activity in a distributed network. Changes in the anatomical configuration or widespread neural activities spanning lobes and hemispheres could make the brain more susceptible to seizures. In this perspective paper, we summarize the current state of knowledge, address several important challenges that could further improve our understanding of the human brain in epilepsy, and invite novel studies addressing these challenges.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Article number868092
JournalFrontiers in Network Physiology
Volume2
DOIs
StatePublished - 2022

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
Copyright © 2022 Sinha, Joshi, Sandhu, Netoff, Zaveri and Lehnertz.

Keywords

  • brain network
  • epilepsy
  • network aberrance
  • network models
  • treatment

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