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  4. Connectivity and tissue microstructural alterations in right and left temporal lobe epilepsy revealed by diffusion spectrum imaging
 
research article

Connectivity and tissue microstructural alterations in right and left temporal lobe epilepsy revealed by diffusion spectrum imaging

Lemkaddem, Alia  
•
Daducci, Alessandro  
•
Kunz, Nicolas  
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2014
NeuroImage: Clinical

Focal epilepsy is increasingly recognized as the result of an altered brain network, both on the structural and functional levels and the characterization of these widespread brain alterations is crucial for our understanding of the clinical manifestation of seizure and cognitive deficits as well as for the management of candidates to epilepsy surgery. Tractography based on Diffusion Tensor Imaging allows non-invasive mapping of white matter tracts in vivo. Recently, diffusion spectrum imaging (DSI), based on an increased number of diffusion directions and intensities, has improved the sensitivity of tractography, notably with respect to the problem of fiber crossing and recent developments allow acquisition times compatible with clinical application. We used DSI and parcellation of the gray matter in regions of interest to build whole-brain connectivity matrices describing the mutual connections between cortical and subcortical regions in patients with focal epilepsy and healthy controls. In addition, the high angular and radial resolution of DSI allowed us to evaluate also some of the biophysical compartment models, to better understand the cause of the changes in diffusion anisotropy. Global connectivity, hub architecture and regional connectivity patterns were altered in TLE patients and showed different characteristics in RTLE vs LTLE with stronger abnormalities in RTLE. The microstructural analysis suggested that disturbed axonal density contributed more than fiber orientation to the connectivity changes affecting the temporal lobes whereas fiber orientation changes were more involved in extratemporal lobe changes. Our study provides further structural evidence that RTLE and LTLE are not symmetrical entities and DSI-based imaging could help investigate the microstructural correlate of these imaging abnormalities.

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Type
research article
DOI
10.1016/j.nicl.2014.07.013
Web of Science ID

WOS:000349667800038

Author(s)
Lemkaddem, Alia  
Daducci, Alessandro  
Kunz, Nicolas  
Lazeyras, François
Seeck, Margitta
Thiran, Jean-Philippe  
Vulliémoz, Serge
Date Issued

2014

Published in
NeuroImage: Clinical
Volume

5

Start page

349

End page

358

Subjects

Diffusion MRI

•

Connectome

•

Tractography

•

Network measures

•

DSI

•

GFA

•

NODDI

•

Temporal lobe epilepsy

•

LTS5

•

CIBM-AIT

Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

EPFL

EPFL units
LTS5  
CIBM  
Available on Infoscience
August 7, 2014
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/105438
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