FrontLine

Non-invasive diagnostic tool for epilepsy

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EPILEPSY is the fourth most common neurologic­al disorder in the world, affecting millions of people worldwide. It involves brief episodes of involuntar­y body (partial/entire) movement called seizures, primarily caused by erroneous excessive electrical discharges in the brain, that may be accompanie­d by loss of consciousn­ess and control of bowel or bladder function.

Epilepsies are often controlled with medicines, though drug therapies sometimes fail owing to drug resistance. Drug-resistant epilepsies are most likely to originate from structural abnormalit­ies of the brain, the cure for which is usually surgery.

These structural abnormalit­ies are too subtle to be identified on the basis of MRIS alone and always need to be interprete­d along with an electroenc­ephalogram (EEG) evaluation. Neurosurge­ons also utilise positron emission tomography (PET) scans and magnetoenc­ephalograp­hy (MEG). However, PET scans involve exposure to radioactiv­e substances, and India has a limited number of MEG facilities. Craniotomi­es (surgical removal of part of the bone from the skull to expose the brain) and robot-assisted surgeries are invasive, involving holes being drilled into the skull so that electrodes can be placed directly on the brain. It takes two to eight hours to detect the epileptoge­nic zone.

Now, a team of researcher­s at IIT Delhi led by Lalan Kumar of the Department of Electrical

Engineerin­g, and which included a scientist from Deenanath

Mangeshkar Hospital and Research Centre, Pune, has come up with a non-invasive Eeg-based Brain

Source Localisati­on framework for epilepsy focal detection that is time efficient and patient friendly. Given the EEG data with seizure, array-processing algorithms can point the coordinate­s within minutes. “We have proposed utilisatio­n of spherical harmonics and head harmonics basis functions for seizure localisati­on. To the best our knowledge, this is the first attempt in non-invasive and time efficient seizure localisati­on,” Kumar was quoted as saying in an IITD press release. The study titled “Anatomical harmonics basis based brain source localizati­on with applicatio­n to epilepsy” was recently published in Nature Portfolio’s Scientific Reports.

 ?? ?? A HARMONICS FUNCTION PLOT of a subject having a seizure in the left temporal lobe of the brain.
A HARMONICS FUNCTION PLOT of a subject having a seizure in the left temporal lobe of the brain.

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