Cortico-cortical evoked potentials and stimulation-elicited gamma activity preferentially propagate from lower- to higher-order visual areas

皮层间诱发电位和刺激诱发的伽马活动优先从低级视觉区域传播到高级视觉区域

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Abstract

OBJECTIVE: The lower-order visual cortex in the medial-occipital region is suggested to send feed-forward signals to the higher-order visual cortex including ventral-occipital-temporal and dorsal-occipital regions. We determined how stimulation-elicited cortical-signals propagate between lower- and higher-order visual cortices, and whether the magnitudes of stimulation-elicited cortical-signals recorded in the higher-order visual cortex differed from those recorded in the lower-order one. METHODS: We studied 10 patients with focal epilepsy who underwent extraoperative electrocorticography recording. Trains of 1-Hz stimuli with an intensity of 3 mA were delivered to an electrode pair within the medial-occipital region; then, cortico-cortical evoked-potential (CCEP) and stimulation-elicited gamma-activity at 80-150 Hz were measured in the ventral-occipital-temporal and dorsal-occipital regions. Likewise, CCEP and stimulation-elicited gamma-activity, driven by stimuli within the higher-order visual cortex, were measured in the lower-order visual cortex. RESULTS: CCEPs generated, via feed-forward propagations, in the higher-order visual cortex were significantly larger than those generated, via feed-back propagations, in the lower-order visual cortex. Stimulation of the lower-order visual cortex elicited augmentation of gamma-activity in the higher-order visual cortex after the preceding CCEP subsided. CONCLUSION: The propagation manners of stimulation-elicited cortical-signals differ between feed-forward and feed-back directions in the human occipital lobe. SIGNIFICANCE: : Such difference may need to be taken into consideration for future clinical application of CCEPs and stimulation-elicited gamma-augmentation in presurgical evaluation for epilepsy surgery.

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