1. Chronic Microelectrode Investigations of Normal Human Brain Physiology Using a Hybrid Depth Electrode
- Author
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Roman Mirsky, P. Charles Garell, Igor O. Volkov, Mark A. Granner, M. Daniel Noh, and Matthew A. Howard
- Subjects
Brain Mapping ,Epilepsy ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,education ,Action Potentials ,Brain ,Equipment Design ,Human brain ,Electroencephalography ,EEG-fMRI ,Electrodes, Implanted ,Stereotaxic Techniques ,Microelectrode ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,medicine ,Humans ,Surgery ,Depth electrode ,Neurology (clinical) ,Psychology ,Microelectrodes ,Clinical treatment ,Neuroscience - Abstract
Neurosurgeons have unique access to in vivo human brain tissue, and in the course of clinical treatment important scientific advances have been made that further our understanding of normal brain physiology. In the modern era, microelectrode recordings have been used to systematically investigate the cellular properties of lateral temporal cerebral cortex. The current report describes a hybrid depth electrode (HDE) recording technique that was developed to enable neurosurgeons to simultaneously investigate normal cellular physiology during chronic intracranial EEG recordings. The HDE combines microelectrode and EEG recordings sites on a single shaft. Multiple microelectrode recordings are obtained from MRI defined brain sites and single-unit activity is discriminated from these data. To date, over 60 HDEs have been placed in 20 epilepsy surgery patients. Unique physiologic data have been gathered from neurons in numerous brain regions, including amygdala, hippocampus, frontal lobe, insula and Heschl's gyrus. Functional activation studies were carried out without risking patient safety or comfort.
- Published
- 1997
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