Can Disruption of Basal Ganglia-Thalamocortical Circuit in Wilson Disease Be Associated with Juvenile Myoclonic Epilepsy Phenotype?
Jessica RossiFrancesco CavallieriGiada GiovanniniFrancesca BenuzziDaniela BallottaAnna Elisabetta VaudanoFrancesca FerraraSara ContardiAntonello PietrangeloElena CorradiniFausta LuiStefano MelettiPublished in: Brain sciences (2022)
In this paper, we describe the multimodal MRI findings in a patient with Wilson disease and a seizure disorder, characterized by an electroclinical picture resembling juvenile myoclonic epilepsy. The brain structural MRI showed a deposition of ferromagnetic materials in the basal ganglia, with marked hypointensities in T2-weighted images of globus pallidus internus bilaterally. A resting-state fMRI study revealed increased functional connectivity in the patient, compared to control subjects, in the following networks: (1) between the primary motor cortex and several cortical regions, including the secondary somatosensory cortex and (2) between the globus pallidus and the thalamo-frontal network. These findings suggest that globus pallidus alterations, due to metal accumulation, can lead to a reduction in the normal globus pallidus inhibitory tone on the thalamo-(motor)-cortical pathway. This, in turn, can result in hyperconnectivity in the motor cortex circuitry, leading to myoclonus and tonic-clonic seizures. We suppose that, in this patient, Wilson disease generated a 'lesion model' of myoclonic epilepsy.
Keyphrases
- deep brain stimulation
- functional connectivity
- resting state
- case report
- contrast enhanced
- magnetic resonance imaging
- temporal lobe epilepsy
- computed tomography
- deep learning
- multiple sclerosis
- single cell
- pain management
- machine learning
- network analysis
- working memory
- convolutional neural network
- living cells
- single molecule