Improving the ripple classification in focal pediatric epilepsy: identifying pathological high-frequency oscillations by Gaussian mixture model clustering.
Carolina MigliorelliSergio RomeroAlejandro BachillerJavier AparicioJoan Francesc AlonsoMiguel Angel MañanasVictoria San Antonio-ArcePublished in: Journal of neural engineering (2021)
Objective. High-frequency oscillations (HFOs) have emerged as a promising clinical biomarker for presurgical evaluation in childhood epilepsy. HFOs are commonly classified in stereo-encephalography as ripples (80-200 Hz) and fast ripples (200-500 Hz). Ripples are less specific and not so directly associated with epileptogenic activity because of their physiological and pathological origin. The aim of this paper is to distinguish HFOs in the ripple band and to improve the evaluation of the epileptogenic zone (EZ).Approach. This study constitutes a novel modeling approach evaluated in ten patients from Sant Joan de Deu Pediatric Hospital (Barcelona, Spain), with clearly-defined seizure onset zones (SOZ) during presurgical evaluation. A subject-by-subject basis analysis is proposed: a probabilistic Gaussian mixture model (GMM) based on the combination of specific ripple features is applied for estimating physiological and pathological ripple subpopulations.Main Results. Clear pathological and physiological ripples are identified. Features differ considerably among patients showing within-subject variability, suggesting that individual models are more appropriate than a traditional whole-population approach. The difference in rates inside and outside the SOZ for pathological ripples is significantly higher than when considering all the ripples. These significant differences also appear in signal segments without epileptiform activity. Pathological ripple rates show a sharp decline from SOZ to non-SOZ contacts and a gradual decrease with distance.Significance. This novel individual GMM approach improves ripple classification and helps to refine the delineation of the EZ, as well as being appropriate to investigate the interaction of epileptogenic and propagation networks.