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Research ArticleNew Research, Integrative Systems

Distribution, Amplitude, Incidence, Co-Occurrence, and Propagation of Human K-Complexes in Focal Transcortical Recordings

Rachel A. Mak-McCully, Burke Q. Rosen, Matthieu Rolland, Jean Régis, Fabrice Bartolomei, Marc Rey, Patrick Chauvel, Sydney S. Cash and Eric Halgren
eNeuro 2 September 2015, 2 (4) ENEURO.0028-15.2015; https://doi.org/10.1523/ENEURO.0028-15.2015
Rachel A. Mak-McCully
1Department of Neurosciences, University of California, San Diego, San Diego, California 92093
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Burke Q. Rosen
2Department of Radiology, University of California, San Diego, San Diego, California 92093
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Matthieu Rolland
2Department of Radiology, University of California, San Diego, San Diego, California 92093
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Jean Régis
4Aix-Marseille Université, Marseille 13385, France
5INSERM, Institut de Neurosciences des Systèmes UMR 1106, Marseille 13005, France
6Assistance Publique–Hôpitaux de Marseille, Timone Hospital, Marseille 13005, France
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Fabrice Bartolomei
4Aix-Marseille Université, Marseille 13385, France
5INSERM, Institut de Neurosciences des Systèmes UMR 1106, Marseille 13005, France
6Assistance Publique–Hôpitaux de Marseille, Timone Hospital, Marseille 13005, France
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Marc Rey
4Aix-Marseille Université, Marseille 13385, France
5INSERM, Institut de Neurosciences des Systèmes UMR 1106, Marseille 13005, France
6Assistance Publique–Hôpitaux de Marseille, Timone Hospital, Marseille 13005, France
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Patrick Chauvel
4Aix-Marseille Université, Marseille 13385, France
5INSERM, Institut de Neurosciences des Systèmes UMR 1106, Marseille 13005, France
6Assistance Publique–Hôpitaux de Marseille, Timone Hospital, Marseille 13005, France
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Sydney S. Cash
7Department of Neurology, Massachusetts General Hospital and Harvard Medical School, Harvard University, Boston, Massachusetts 02114
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Eric Halgren
1Department of Neurosciences, University of California, San Diego, San Diego, California 92093
2Department of Radiology, University of California, San Diego, San Diego, California 92093
3Department of Psychiatry, University of California, San Diego, San Diego, California 92093
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Jump to comment:

  • Transcortical polarity inversion and choice of bipolar or referential EEG montages
    Richard Wennberg
    Submitted on: 05 January 2017
  • Submitted on: (5 January 2017)
    Page navigation anchor for Transcortical polarity inversion and choice of bipolar or referential EEG montages
    Transcortical polarity inversion and choice of bipolar or referential EEG montages
    • Richard Wennberg, Professor of Medicine (Neurology), University of Toronto

    This fascinating paper suggests the existence of small, focal K-complexes in human sleep, adding to growing evidence that sleep may be a focal phenomenon (Krueger et al., 2008). I would just like to briefly respond to the authors’ criticisms of my previous paper examining the large intracranial fields associated with classical scalp EEG K-complexes (Wennberg, 2010).

    Mak-McCully et al. (2015) argue that my presentation of intracranial EEG in a common average reference montage was ambiguous, and that the resultant waveforms could be interpreted to suggest K-complex generation in subcortical white matter. However, such an interpretation would be incompatible with analysis of the combined intracranial/extracranial field in its entirety (and entirely at odds with my own interpretation in the paper). The reasons behind the choice of using the average reference – for the specific purposes of that study – were explained in the paper’s Methods, and comparative examples of other referential derivations (linked ears, O2, Sp2, FCz) were provided in a Supplementary figure (Wennberg, 2010).

    The bipolar transcortical derivations in Mak-McCully et al. (2015) are perfectly valid, and their Figure 3 showing a dorsal frontal K-complex depicts an intracranial electrical field identical to those presented in Wennberg (2010) and more recently in Voysey et al. (2015). Nevertheless, the bipolar derivations do not provide information not already present in the referential recording...

    Show More

    This fascinating paper suggests the existence of small, focal K-complexes in human sleep, adding to growing evidence that sleep may be a focal phenomenon (Krueger et al., 2008). I would just like to briefly respond to the authors’ criticisms of my previous paper examining the large intracranial fields associated with classical scalp EEG K-complexes (Wennberg, 2010).

    Mak-McCully et al. (2015) argue that my presentation of intracranial EEG in a common average reference montage was ambiguous, and that the resultant waveforms could be interpreted to suggest K-complex generation in subcortical white matter. However, such an interpretation would be incompatible with analysis of the combined intracranial/extracranial field in its entirety (and entirely at odds with my own interpretation in the paper). The reasons behind the choice of using the average reference – for the specific purposes of that study – were explained in the paper’s Methods, and comparative examples of other referential derivations (linked ears, O2, Sp2, FCz) were provided in a Supplementary figure (Wennberg, 2010).

    The bipolar transcortical derivations in Mak-McCully et al. (2015) are perfectly valid, and their Figure 3 showing a dorsal frontal K-complex depicts an intracranial electrical field identical to those presented in Wennberg (2010) and more recently in Voysey et al. (2015). Nevertheless, the bipolar derivations do not provide information not already present in the referential recordings; they simply augment amplitude by maximizing the voltage difference between the two depth electrode contacts making up the bipolar channel, one on the electronegative, superficial side of the cortical dipole layer (Gloor, 1985) and the other on the electropositive underside of the cortical mantle. The transcortical bipolar channel thus represents, in essence, a local active reference recording. That the same information is present in both bipolar and referential derivations is emphasized by the authors’ own methods: to identify contacts for reformatting into transcortical bipolar channels Mak-McCully et al. (2015) first “examined for successive contacts which recorded polarity-inverted spontaneous activity” along a given depth electrode – in referential recordings.

    References

    Gloor P (1985) Neuronal generators and the problem of localization in electroencephalography: application of volume conductor theory to electroencephalography. J Clin Neurophysiol 2:327-354.

    Krueger JM, Rector DM, Roy S, Van Dongen HPA, Belenky G, Panksepp J (2008) Sleep as a fundamental property of neuronal assemblies. Nat Rev Neurosci 9:910-919.

    Mak-McCully RA, Rosen BQ, Rolland M, Régis J, Bartolomei F, Rey M, Chauvel P, Cash SS, Halgren E (2015) eNeuro 2(4) e0028-15.2015 doi: 10.1523/ENEURO.0028-15.2015

    Voysey Z, Martín-López D, Jiménez-Jiménez D, Selway RP, Alarcón G, Valentín A (2015) Electrical stimulation of the anterior cingulate gyrus induces responses similar to K-complexes in awake humans. Brain Stimul 8:881-890.

    Wennberg R (2010) Intracranial cortical localization of the human K-complex. Clin Neurophysiol 121:1176-1186.

    Show Less
    Competing Interests: None declared.
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Distribution, Amplitude, Incidence, Co-Occurrence, and Propagation of Human K-Complexes in Focal Transcortical Recordings
Rachel A. Mak-McCully, Burke Q. Rosen, Matthieu Rolland, Jean Régis, Fabrice Bartolomei, Marc Rey, Patrick Chauvel, Sydney S. Cash, Eric Halgren
eNeuro 2 September 2015, 2 (4) ENEURO.0028-15.2015; DOI: 10.1523/ENEURO.0028-15.2015

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Distribution, Amplitude, Incidence, Co-Occurrence, and Propagation of Human K-Complexes in Focal Transcortical Recordings
Rachel A. Mak-McCully, Burke Q. Rosen, Matthieu Rolland, Jean Régis, Fabrice Bartolomei, Marc Rey, Patrick Chauvel, Sydney S. Cash, Eric Halgren
eNeuro 2 September 2015, 2 (4) ENEURO.0028-15.2015; DOI: 10.1523/ENEURO.0028-15.2015
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Keywords

  • depth recordings
  • k-complex
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Jump to comment:

  • Transcortical polarity inversion and choice of bipolar or referential EEG montages
    Richard Wennberg
    Published on: 05 January 2017
  • Published on: (5 January 2017)
    Page navigation anchor for Transcortical polarity inversion and choice of bipolar or referential EEG montages
    Transcortical polarity inversion and choice of bipolar or referential EEG montages
    • Richard Wennberg, Professor of Medicine (Neurology), University of Toronto

    This fascinating paper suggests the existence of small, focal K-complexes in human sleep, adding to growing evidence that sleep may be a focal phenomenon (Krueger et al., 2008). I would just like to briefly respond to the authors’ criticisms of my previous paper examining the large intracranial fields associated with classical scalp EEG K-complexes (Wennberg, 2010).

    Mak-McCully et al. (2015) argue that my presentation of intracranial EEG in a common average reference montage was ambiguous, and that the resultant waveforms could be interpreted to suggest K-complex generation in subcortical white matter. However, such an interpretation would be incompatible with analysis of the combined intracranial/extracranial field in its entirety (and entirely at odds with my own interpretation in the paper). The reasons behind the choice of using the average reference – for the specific purposes of that study – were explained in the paper’s Methods, and comparative examples of other referential derivations (linked ears, O2, Sp2, FCz) were provided in a Supplementary figure (Wennberg, 2010).

    The bipolar transcortical derivations in Mak-McCully et al. (2015) are perfectly valid, and their Figure 3 showing a dorsal frontal K-complex depicts an intracranial electrical field identical to those presented in Wennberg (2010) and more recently in Voysey et al. (2015). Nevertheless, the bipolar derivations do not provide information not already present in the referential recording...

    Show More

    This fascinating paper suggests the existence of small, focal K-complexes in human sleep, adding to growing evidence that sleep may be a focal phenomenon (Krueger et al., 2008). I would just like to briefly respond to the authors’ criticisms of my previous paper examining the large intracranial fields associated with classical scalp EEG K-complexes (Wennberg, 2010).

    Mak-McCully et al. (2015) argue that my presentation of intracranial EEG in a common average reference montage was ambiguous, and that the resultant waveforms could be interpreted to suggest K-complex generation in subcortical white matter. However, such an interpretation would be incompatible with analysis of the combined intracranial/extracranial field in its entirety (and entirely at odds with my own interpretation in the paper). The reasons behind the choice of using the average reference – for the specific purposes of that study – were explained in the paper’s Methods, and comparative examples of other referential derivations (linked ears, O2, Sp2, FCz) were provided in a Supplementary figure (Wennberg, 2010).

    The bipolar transcortical derivations in Mak-McCully et al. (2015) are perfectly valid, and their Figure 3 showing a dorsal frontal K-complex depicts an intracranial electrical field identical to those presented in Wennberg (2010) and more recently in Voysey et al. (2015). Nevertheless, the bipolar derivations do not provide information not already present in the referential recordings; they simply augment amplitude by maximizing the voltage difference between the two depth electrode contacts making up the bipolar channel, one on the electronegative, superficial side of the cortical dipole layer (Gloor, 1985) and the other on the electropositive underside of the cortical mantle. The transcortical bipolar channel thus represents, in essence, a local active reference recording. That the same information is present in both bipolar and referential derivations is emphasized by the authors’ own methods: to identify contacts for reformatting into transcortical bipolar channels Mak-McCully et al. (2015) first “examined for successive contacts which recorded polarity-inverted spontaneous activity” along a given depth electrode – in referential recordings.

    References

    Gloor P (1985) Neuronal generators and the problem of localization in electroencephalography: application of volume conductor theory to electroencephalography. J Clin Neurophysiol 2:327-354.

    Krueger JM, Rector DM, Roy S, Van Dongen HPA, Belenky G, Panksepp J (2008) Sleep as a fundamental property of neuronal assemblies. Nat Rev Neurosci 9:910-919.

    Mak-McCully RA, Rosen BQ, Rolland M, Régis J, Bartolomei F, Rey M, Chauvel P, Cash SS, Halgren E (2015) eNeuro 2(4) e0028-15.2015 doi: 10.1523/ENEURO.0028-15.2015

    Voysey Z, Martín-López D, Jiménez-Jiménez D, Selway RP, Alarcón G, Valentín A (2015) Electrical stimulation of the anterior cingulate gyrus induces responses similar to K-complexes in awake humans. Brain Stimul 8:881-890.

    Wennberg R (2010) Intracranial cortical localization of the human K-complex. Clin Neurophysiol 121:1176-1186.

    Show Less
    Competing Interests: None declared.

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