Publication | Open Access
A taxonomy of seizure dynamotypes
152
Citations
69
References
2020
Year
Brain OrganizationSocial SciencesSeizure DynamicsNeurodynamicsDynamic CompositionCognitive ElectrophysiologyNeurologyNetwork NeuroscienceNeuroinformaticsBifurcation TheoryBrain CircuitrySeizure DynamotypesNeurophysiologyComputational NeuroscienceNeuroanatomyEeg Signal ProcessingNeuroscienceBrain ElectrophysiologyCentral Nervous SystemMedicine
Seizures are a disruption of normal brain activity present across a vast range of species and conditions. We introduce an organizing principle that leads to the first objective Taxonomy of Seizure Dynamics (TSD) based on bifurcation theory. The 'dynamotype' of a seizure is the dynamic composition that defines its observable characteristics, including how it starts, evolves and ends. Analyzing over 2000 focal-onset seizures from multiple centers, we find evidence of all 16 dynamotypes predicted in TSD. We demonstrate that patients' dynamotypes evolve during their lifetime and display complex but systematic variations including hierarchy (certain types are more common), non-bijectivity (a patient may display multiple types) and pairing preference (multiple types may occur during one seizure). TSD provides a way to stratify patients in complement to present clinical classifications, a language to describe the most critical features of seizure dynamics, and a framework to guide future research focused on dynamical properties.
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