@article{52ac3c50fa294262b2b20b5c4a983a75,
title = "Electrical conductivities of the freshly excised cerebral cortex in epilepsy surgery patients; correlation with pathology, seizure duration, and diffusion tensor imaging",
abstract = "The electrical conductivities (σ) of freshly excised neocortex and subcortical white matter were studied in the frequency range of physiological relevance for EEG (5-1005 Hz) in 21 patients (ages 0.67 to 55 years) undergoing epilepsy neurosurgery. Surgical patients were classified as having cortical dysplasia (CD) or non-CD pathologies. Diffusion tensor imaging (DTI) for apparent diffusion coefficient (ADC) and fractional anisotropy (FA) was obtained in 9 patients. Results found that electrical conductivities in freshly excised neocortex vary significantly from patient to patient (σ = 0.0660-0.156 S/m). Cerebral cortex from CD patients had increased conductivities compared with non-CD cases. In addition, longer seizure durations positively correlated with conductivities for CD tissue, while they negatively correlated for non-CD tissue. DTI ADC eigenvalues inversely correlated with electrical conductivity in CD and non-CD tissue. These results in a small initial cohort indicate that electrical conductivity of freshly excised neocortex from epilepsy surgery patients varies as a consequence of clinical variables, such as underlying pathology and seizure duration, and inversely correlates with DTI ADC values. Understanding how disease affects cortical electrical conductivity and ways to non-invasively measure it, perhaps through DTI, could enhance the ability to localize EEG dipoles and other relevant information in the treatment of epilepsy surgery patients.",
keywords = "Brain, Conductivity, Cortical dysplasia, DTI, EEG, MEG",
author = "M. Akhtari and N. Salamon and R. Duncan and I. Fried and Mathern, {G. W.}",
note = "Funding Information: The authors would like to thank Dr Harry Vinters (UCLA Department of Pathology) and Mr Maurizio DiMauro (The University of New Mexico, Department of Physics) for their valued contributions. This study was supported by NIH grants R01 NS38992 and P01 NS02808.",
year = "2006",
month = jun,
doi = "10.1007/s10548-006-0006-x",
language = "אנגלית",
volume = "18",
pages = "281--290",
journal = "Brain Topography",
issn = "0896-0267",
publisher = "Kluwer Academic/Human Sciences Press Inc.",
number = "4",
}