Insulo-opercular cortex generates oroalimentary automatisms in temporal seizures

Jerome Aupy, Ika Noviawaty, Balu Krishnan, Piradee Suwankpakdee, Juan Bulacio, Jorge Gonzalez-Martinez, Imad Najm, Patrick Chauvel
Epilepsia. 2018-02-02; 59(3): 583-594
DOI: 10.1111/epi.14011

PubMed
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Aupy J(1)(2)(3), Noviawaty I(1)(4), Krishnan B(1), Suwankpakdee P(1)(5), Bulacio J(1), Gonzalez-Martinez J(1), Najm I(1), Chauvel P(1).

Author information:
(1)Epilepsy Center, Cleveland Clinic Neurological Institute, Cleveland, OH, USA.
(2)Department of Clinical Neurosciences, Bordeaux University Hospital, Bordeaux, France.
(3)University of Bordeaux, Institute of Neurodegenerative Diseases, National Center for Scientific Research Mixed Unit of Research 5293, Bordeaux, France.
(4)Department of Neurology, University of Massachusetts Medical School, Worcester, MA, USA.
(5)Pediatric Neurology, Phramongkutklao Hospital, Bangkok, Thailand.

OBJECTIVE: Oroalimentary automatisms (OAAs) resembling normal alimentary behavior are stereotyped complex movements that may occur during epileptic seizures. They are considered common clinical signs in temporal lobe seizures, but their anatomofunctional mechanisms are not established. We took the opportunity of presurgical intracerebral recordings to study the relations between the occurrence of OAAs and temporal/spatial features of ictal activities.

METHODS: We retrospectively reviewed patients with medically intractable medial temporal lobe epilepsy who underwent stereoelectroencephalography (SEEG) at Cleveland Clinic between 2009 and 2016. Patients presenting oroalimentary
automatisms during seizures, with intracerebral electrodes spanning temporal and extratemporal areas, were selected. SEEG-clinical correlations with latency measurements were done. Coherence analyses were performed on regions of interest as defined by the areas involved at the onset of oroalimentary automatisms.

RESULTS: Fifteen patients (115 seizures) were analyzed. Sixty-nine seizures exhibited overt oroalimentary automatisms. Only insulo-opercular cortex ictal involvement was consistently related to the occurrence of OAAs, with a linear correlation between OAA onset and ictal oscillatory activity onset in the insulo-opercular cortex. SEEG signal processing showed an increase in theta coherence preceding oroalimentary automatism onset between mediobasal-temporal structures and insulo-opercular cortex, as well as between the 2 insulo-opercular regions.

SIGNIFICANCE: The underlying mechanism for the production of oroalimentary automatisms in medial temporal seizures is based on temporal-insulo-opercular theta coherence leading to a synchronous state generating rhythmic patterned outputs from the cortical masticatory area.

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