
Faculty, Staff and Student Publications
Publication Date
9-1-2023
Journal
Epilepsia
Abstract
Objective: Severe respiratory dysfunction induced by generalized convulsive seizures (GCS) is now thought to be a common mechanism for sudden unexpected death in epilepsy (SUDEP). In a mouse model of seizure-induced death, increased interictal respiratory variability was reported in mice that later died of respiratory arrest after GCS. We studied respiratory variability in epilepsy patients as a predictive tool for severity of postictal hypoxemia, a potential biomarker for SUDEP risk. We then explored the relationship between respiratory variability and central CO2 drive, measured by the hypercapnic ventilatory response (HCVR).
Methods: We reviewed clinical, video-electroencephalography, and respiratory (belts, airflow, pulse oximeter, and HCVR) data of epilepsy patients. Mean, SD, and coefficient of variation (CV) of interbreath interval (IBI) were calculated. Primary outcomes were: (1) nadir of capillary oxygen saturation (SpO2 ) and (2) duration of oxygen desaturation. Poincaré plots of IBI were created. Covariates were evaluated in univariate models, then, based on Akaike information criteria (AIC), multivariate regression models were created.
Results: Of 66 GCS recorded in 131 subjects, 30 had interpretable respiratory data. In the multivariate model with the lowest AIC value, duration of epilepsy was a significant predictor of duration of oxygen desaturation. Duration of tonic phase and CV of IBI during the third postictal minute correlated with SpO2 nadir, whereas CV of IBI during non-rapid eye movement sleep had a negative correlation. Poincaré plots showed that long-term variability was significantly greater in subjects with ≥200 s of postictal oxygen desaturation after GCS compared to those with < 200 s desaturation. Finally, HCVR slope showed a negative correlation with measures of respiratory variability.
Significance: These results indicate that interictal respiratory variability predicts severity of postictal oxygen desaturation, suggesting its utility as a potential biomarker. They also suggest that interictal respiratory control may be abnormal in some patients with epilepsy.
Keywords
Humans, Electroencephalography, Epilepsy, Epilepsy, Generalized, Hypercapnia, Hypoxia, Oxygen, Respiration Disorders, Seizures, Sudden Unexpected Death in Epilepsy
DOI
10.1111/epi.17691
PMID
37344924
PMCID
PMC10538446
PubMedCentral® Posted Date
9-1-2024
PubMedCentral® Full Text Version
Author MSS
Published Open-Access
yes