A 35-year-old woman was referred to the epilepsy monitoring unit (EMU) because of intractable focal motor seizures and a 3-month history of twitching of the left eye. Epilepsy was diagnosed at age 22 years; seizures commencing with left arm tingling and then jerking of the arm, followed by left leg tingling and jerking, with or without secondary generalization. Seizures proved to be medically intractable, and 5 years later she underwent a partial right frontal lobe resection after intracranial electroencephalography (EEG) monitoring, the latter documenting not only frontal lobe epileptiform activity but also independent temporoparietal abnormalities (details in Supplementary Material, accessible at journals.cambridge.org). Pre- and peri-natal and developmental history were normal, pre-surgical MRI brain scans were normal, and surgical pathology showed no definite abnormalities in the resected frontal lobe tissue.
Seizure relief was only transient post-resection, and 4 years later a vagus nerve stimulator (VNS) was implanted, without clear benefit in terms of seizure control. At the time of this EMU admission, the patient was receiving levetiracetam 4000 mg/day, lacosamide 400 mg/day, topiramate 400 mg/day, and eslicarbazepine 400 mg/day. Her VNS was programmed to cycle 30 seconds on/3 minutes off, 25 Hz, 1 mA, 500 mseconds pulse width.
In the EMU, interictal EEG revealed sporadic multifocal epileptiform discharges, predominating over the right central region and, independently, over the right temporal region, the latter focus often showing evidence of complex posterior to anterior spike propagation. Remarkably, the most prominent feature of the EEG recordings was the presence of nearly continuous high-amplitude arrhythmic spikes over the left anterior frontal region, with positive phase reversal in bipolar montages at F3 and maximal amplitude in referential montages at Fp1 (electronegative) > F3 (electropositive). Review of the video recording supported interpretation of the high-amplitude frontal spikes as myographic potentials associated with contractions of the left orbicularis oculi muscle (Figure 1A; corresponding video [MP4 format] available as Supplementary Material). Synchronous lower amplitude myographic potentials over the right frontopolar region at Fp2 were apparent when the patient’s eyes were open and correlated with partial activation of the right orbicularis occurring synchronously with the left orbicularis contractions (Figure 1A, inset, and video). The right frontal myographic potentials were much less evident with the eyes closed.
Apart from the myographic electrical field present at Fp1-F3, no EEG correlate could be appreciated with the eye twitches (Figure 1B). Infrequently, an orbicularis contraction was associated with a synchronous myoclonic twitch of the left lower face, usually with no EEG correlate but on rare occasion accompanied by a synchronous spike maximal at T4 (Figure 1B, and video). Separately, occasional myoclonic jerks of the left hand occurred, with or without an EEG correlate in the form of a propagating temporal maximal spike (Figure 1B). The hand twitches were not synchronous with the eye twitches.
Magnetoencephalography (MEG) was performed in the hope of identifying a cortical source for the eye twitches and to enable standard MEG source imaging (MSI) of interictal spikes. The 45-minute MEG recording was acquired using an Elekta Neuromag TRIUX 306-channel system (Elekta, Helsinki, Finland), with simultaneous 32-channel EEG that included bilateral supraorbital electrodes (SO1/SO2, placed directly inferior to Fp1/Fp2, immediately above the eyebrow). Sampling frequency was 1000 Hz.
To suppress magnetic artifact associated with the VNS, the spatiotemporal signal space separation (tSSS) algorithmReference Taulu and Simola1, Reference Taulu and Hari2 implemented within the Elekta Maxfilter system (10-second time window, subspace correlation 0.980) was applied to the data once obtained. As previously reported for active VNS and deep brain stimulator devices,Reference Tanaka, Thiele and Madsen3–Reference Wennberg, del Campo and Shampur5 tSSS successfully removed the neurostimulator artifact and permitted easy visual interpretation of the MEG signal, during both on and off phases of the VNS duty cycle (Figure 2).
For MSI analysis of the eye twitching, the MEG signal was first back-averaged on the left orbicularis contractions recorded at SO1 (and Fp1 and F3). The peaks of the myographic potentials were visually identified and manually marked for averaging using CURRY 6 (Compumedics, Abbotsford, Australia). Epochs were generated using a 1-second time window from −750 to +250 mseconds relative to the myographic peak. Potentials occurring less than 1 second after a marked peak were excluded to permit uncontaminated epoching (see Figure 2, potentials marked by yellow lines selected for averaging). In total, 790 potentials were selected for averaging, 617 (78%) from VNS off periods and 173 (22%) from VNS on periods (approximately reflecting the actual soft start VNS duty cycle evident as 25 Hz artifact in the electrocardiogram (EKG) lead: ~172 seconds [81%] off, ~40 seconds [19%] on).
Interictal spikes were visually identified in the raw EEG and tSSS artifact-suppressed MEG data (band-passed between 1 and 70 Hz) and grouped into separate foci for spike averaging based on analysis of each spike’s morphology and associated EEG/MEG voltage/flux field topography, as described previously.Reference Wennberg, del Campo and Shampur5–Reference Wennberg and Cheyne7 A total of 55 spikes were identified from a right central focus (C4 EEG maximum; Figure 2) and 22 spikes from a right temporal focus (T4 EEG maximum; Figure 2).
Source modeling of the averaged, epoched data was performed using CURRY 6 as described previously.Reference Wennberg, del Campo and Shampur5, Reference Wennberg and Cheyne6 Noise level was estimated as the variance of the data in the signal from −750 to −250 mseconds before the myographic or interictal spike peaks. A band-pass of 1–30 Hz was used for the eye twitch data and the right central spike focus; a band-pass of 3–30 Hz was used for the right temporal spike focus, where fewer spikes were available for averaging (decreasing signal to noise ratio), and MEG and EEG peaks were asynchronous. A spherical forward model was used for both the eye twitch and interictal spike data. For the eye twitch data, an equivalent current (fixed coherent) dipole inverse model was used. For the interictal spike foci data, a distributed source inverse model was used (standardized low-resolution brain electromagnetic tomography, sLORETA) to highlight the spatial relations between the different source maxima.
The MSI result obtained for the eye twitch data revealed a focal cortical source situated in the posterior wall of the precentral gyrus, in the region of the classical depiction of the eye area of the motor homonculusReference Penfield and Rasmussen8 (Figure 3). The dipole source localization confirmed a clinical suspicion that the patient’s eye twitching represented epilepsia partialis continua (EPC) of the orbicularis oculi. The tangential orientation of the dipole source with respect to the cranial surface, with current flowing from posterior to anterior, from superficial to deep within the cortical mantle of the intrasulcal posterior wall of the precentral gyrus (Figure 3), was ideal for detection by MEG, which is most sensitive to tangentially oriented currents.Reference Wennberg and Cheyne6, Reference Wennberg and Cheyne7 The small size of the source and its intrasulcal location presumably explain in part its invisibility to EEG detection, even after back-averaging and exclusion of the frontal electrodes (data not shown). It is also possible that volume conducted currents from the high-amplitude myographic potentials could eclipse the focal cortical source in EEG, but not MEG, which is insensitive to secondary currents.
Figure 4 shows the eye area dipole source localization in relation to the hand area of the motor homunculus, the latter readily identifiable in MRI scans by a characteristic “knob” in the axial plane and a corresponding “hook” in the sagittal plane.Reference Yousry, Schmid and Alkadhi9 The eye area dipole can be seen to be located lateral and anterior to the hand area, as expected from classical electrical stimulation studiesReference Penfield and Rasmussen8 and from transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) studies, where contralateral orbicularis activation occurred in response to TMS applied approximately 2 cm lateral and 1 cm anterior to the motor hand area.Reference Paradiso, Cunic, Gunraj and Chen10
With regard to the incomplete right orbicularis contractions seen in association with the left eye twitches (with eyes open; Figure 1, and video), the most parsimonious explanation is that the right-sided twitches reflect ipsilateral projections from the right motor cortex (in keeping with the traditional neurological concept of bilateral cortical innervation of the upper facial muscles).
With regard to the patient’s persistent major motor seizures (which are independent of her new onset EPC), ictal onsets during the EMU admission were poorly and inconsistently localized, usually showing a right centroparietal maximum. The MSI of her most active interictal spike foci revealed the C4 EEG spikes to be located anterior to the eye area dipole source, abutting the resection margin, whereas the T4 EEG spikes were found to have a complicated pattern of propagation with an initial MEG peak ~30 mseconds before the EEG peak localized within the central sulcus, just medial and posterior to the eye area dipole source along the anterior wall of the postcentral gyrus (Figure 5). Future medical or surgical treatment possibilities are under discussion with the patient.
The classical depiction of the motor homunculus defined by intraoperative electrical stimulation of the precentral gyrus includes an eye area.Reference Penfield and Rasmussen8 Notwithstanding, TMS investigations have questioned whether projections exist from primary motor cortex to the upper facial muscles in man, although one study clearly showed contralateral orbicularis activation in response to TMS applied anterolateral to the motor hand area.Reference Paradiso, Cunic, Gunraj and Chen10 The discrete localization by MSI of the cortical generator responsible for this patient’s orbicularis EPC provides novel, further support for the existence of a human motor homuncular eye area.
Acknowledgments
The authors express their gratitude to Nat Shampur for expert technical assistance and to the patient for her willingness to permit the presentation of her clinical investigations.
Statement of Authorship
JMdC and RW conceived the study. LGD and RW acquired and analyzed the MEG data. RW prepared the figures and wrote the manuscript. All authors critically reviewed the manuscript and approved the final version.
Disclosure Information
Richard Wennberg, Luis Garcia Dominguez, and J. Martin del Campo do not have any disclosures.
Supplementary Material
To view supplementary material for this article, please visit https://doi.org/10.1017/cjn.2018.373