The relationship of medial temporal lobe epilepsy with the declarative memory system
Publicado en línea: 22 nov 2016
Páginas: 157 - 165
Recibido: 03 oct 2016
Aceptado: 10 nov 2016
DOI: https://doi.org/10.21307/joepi-2016-0011
Palabras clave
© 2016 Péter Halász et al., published by Sciendo
This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License.
Introduction
Medial temporal lobe of epilepsy (MTLE) is considered as local/regional epilepsy. However, as was discussed in Part I of this review (Halász, 2016a) there is more evidence regarding the involvement of both temporal lobes so as to consider MTLE as one of the typical bilateral system epilepsies.
Aim
To provide contemporary review of MTLE in relation to the declarative memory system and the newly recognized hippocampo-frontal memory consolidation during slow wave sleep.
Methods
A review of the available literature on experimental and clinical data and also the authors own studies in MTLE patients.
Review, discussion and results
New experimental and clinical neurophysiological data have shown that MTLE is closely linked to the hippocampal memory system. It is likely that hippocampal spiking is the epileptic variations of the normal sharp wave ripple events mediating the encoding and consolidation of memory engrams by a hippocampo-frontal dialogue during slow wave sleep.
Conclusions
The source of memory impairment in MTLE patients is not merely the cell loss and synaptic transformation of the hippocampal structure, but the every night interference with memory consolidation due to interictal spiking.