Subclinical epileptiform activity accelerates the progression of Alzheimer’s disease: A long-term EEG study

•Epileptiform discharges are presented in half of Alzheimer patients without epileptic seizures.•Alzheimer patients with epileptiform discharges have significantly lower memory performance.•Epileptiform discharges associate with 1.5-times faster cognitive decline in a prospective follow-up. While ma...

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Veröffentlicht in:Clinical neurophysiology 2021-08, Vol.132 (8), p.1982-1989
Hauptverfasser: Horvath, Andras Attila, Papp, Aniko, Zsuffa, Janos, Szucs, Anna, Luckl, Janos, Radai, Ferenc, Nagy, Ferenc, Hidasi, Zoltan, Csukly, Gabor, Barcs, Gabor, Kamondi, Anita
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:•Epileptiform discharges are presented in half of Alzheimer patients without epileptic seizures.•Alzheimer patients with epileptiform discharges have significantly lower memory performance.•Epileptiform discharges associate with 1.5-times faster cognitive decline in a prospective follow-up. While many studies suggest that patients with Alzheimer’s disease have a higher chance for developing epileptic seizures, only a few studies are available examining independent epileptic discharges. The major aims of our study was to determine the prevalence of subclinical epileptiform activity (SEA) in AD compared to healthy elderly controls with the hypothesis that SEA is more frequent in AD than in cognitively normal individuals. Another aim was to analyze the effect of baseline SEA captured with electroencephalography on the progression of the disease with longitudinal cognitive testing. We investigated 52 Alzheimer patients with no history of epileptic seizures and 20 healthy individuals. All participants underwent a 24-hour electroencephalography, neurology, neuroimaging and neuropsychology examination. Two independent raters analyzed visually the electroencephalograms and both raters were blind to the diagnoses. Thirty-eight Alzheimer patients were enrolled in a 3-year long prospective follow-up study with yearly repeated cognitive evaluation. Subclinical epileptiform discharges were recorded significantly (p:0.018) more frequently in Alzheimer patients (54%) than in healthy elderly (25%). Epileptiform discharges were associated with lower performance scores in memory. Alzheimer patients with spikes showed 1.5-times faster decline in global cognitive scores than patients without (p 
ISSN:1388-2457
1872-8952
DOI:10.1016/j.clinph.2021.03.050