Article ; Online: Ocular motility as a measure of cerebral dysfunction in adults with focal epilepsy.
2023 Volume 141, Page(s) 109140
Abstract: Objective: Using objective oculomotor measures, we aimed to: (1) compare oculomotor performance in patients with drug-resistant focal epilepsy to healthy controls, and (2) investigate the differential impact of epileptogenic focus laterality and ... ...
Abstract | Objective: Using objective oculomotor measures, we aimed to: (1) compare oculomotor performance in patients with drug-resistant focal epilepsy to healthy controls, and (2) investigate the differential impact of epileptogenic focus laterality and location on oculomotor performance. Methods: We recruited 51 adults with drug-resistant focal epilepsy from the Comprehensive Epilepsy Programs of two tertiary hospitals and 31 healthy controls to perform prosaccade and antisaccade tasks. Oculomotor variables of interest were latency, visuospatial accuracy, and antisaccade error rate. Linear mixed models were performed to compare interactions between groups (epilepsy, control) and oculomotor tasks, and between epilepsy subgroups and oculomotor tasks for each oculomotor variable. Results: Compared to healthy controls, patients with drug-resistant focal epilepsy exhibited longer antisaccade latencies (mean difference = 42.8 ms, P = 0.001), poorer spatial accuracy for both prosaccade (mean difference = 0.4°, P = 0.002), and antisaccade tasks (mean difference = 2.1°, P < 0.001), and more antisaccade errors (mean difference = 12.6%, P < 0.001). In the epilepsy subgroup analysis, left-hemispheric epilepsy patients exhibited longer antisaccade latencies compared to controls (mean difference = 52.2 ms, P = 0.003), while right-hemispheric epilepsy was the most spatially inaccurate compared to controls (mean difference = 2.5°, P = 0.003). The temporal lobe epilepsy subgroup displayed longer antisaccade latencies compared to controls (mean difference = 47.6 ms, P = 0.005). Significance: Patients with drug-resistant focal epilepsy exhibit poor inhibitory control as evidenced by a high percentage of antisaccade errors, slower cognitive processing speed, and impaired visuospatial accuracy on oculomotor tasks. Patients with left-hemispheric epilepsy and temporal lobe epilepsy have markedly impaired processing speed. Overall, oculomotor tasks can be a useful tool to objectively quantify cerebral dysfunction in drug-resistant focal epilepsy. |
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MeSH term(s) | Humans ; Adult ; Saccades ; Epilepsy, Temporal Lobe ; Eye Movements ; Epilepsy/complications ; Epilepsy/diagnosis ; Epilepsies, Partial/complications ; Epilepsies, Partial/diagnosis ; Reaction Time |
Language | English |
Publishing date | 2023-02-20 |
Publishing country | United States |
Document type | Journal Article ; Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't |
ZDB-ID | 2010587-3 |
ISSN | 1525-5069 ; 1525-5050 |
ISSN (online) | 1525-5069 |
ISSN | 1525-5050 |
DOI | 10.1016/j.yebeh.2023.109140 |
Database | MEDical Literature Analysis and Retrieval System OnLINE |
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