Medline ® Abstract for Reference 11
of 'Sleep-related epilepsy syndromes'
11
TI
Cyclic alternating pattern (CAP) and epilepsy during sleep: how a physiological rhythm modulates a pathological event.
AU
Parrino L, Smerieri A, Spaggiari MC, Terzano MG
SO
Clin Neurophysiol. 2000;111 Suppl 2:S39.
OBJECTIVES:
Epileptic susceptibility is triggered by the sleeping condition. However, both ictal and interictal events are not equally affected by the different sleep states. Besides the well-known dichotomy between non-REM sleep (high activation) and REM sleep (low activation), epileptic phenomena are deeply sensitive to the ongoing level of arousal.
METHODS:
During non-REM sleep the arousal level can be either unstable, as expressed by the repetitive sequences of the cyclic alternating pattern (CAP), or stable, as reflected by non-CAP. Phase A (arousal complex) and phase B (post-arousal rebound response) are the two basic components of the CAP cycle, which presents a 20-40 s periodicity. Three subtypes of A phases can be recognized: the A1 subtypes, which are thoroughly composed of K-complexes and delta bursts, and subtypes A2 and A3 dominated by moderate (A2) or prominent (A3) EEG desynchrony.
RESULTS:
As a manifestation of unstable sleep, CAP offers a favorable background for the occurrence of nocturnal motor seizures that in most cases arise in concomitance with a phase A. In primary generalized epilepsy (PGE) and in lesional epilepsies with fronto-temporal focus, activation of interictal discharges is high during CAP reaching the climax during phase A and the strongest inhibition during phase B. A lack of modulation is observed instead in epilepsy with benign rolandic spikes. In PGE, the interictal bursts are mostly associated with the highly synchronized phase A1 subtypes.
CONCLUSIONS:
The analysis of sleep microstructure based on CAP parameters offers a sensitive framework for exploring the linkage between dynamic EEG events and epileptic phenomena.
AD
Istituto di Neurologia, Universitàdi Parma, Via del Quartiere, 4, 43100, Parma, Italy.
PMID
