Objective: Vagus nerve stimulation (VNS) has been a neuromodulatory option for treating drug-resistant epilepsy (DRE), but its mechanism remains unclear. To obtain insight into the mechanism by which VNS reduces epileptic seizures, the immediate effects of VNS in brain networks of DRE patients were investigated when the patients' vagal nerve stimulators were turned on. Methods: The brain network properties of 14 DRE patients with a vagal nerve stimulator and 14 healthy controls were evaluated using magnetoencephalography recordings for 6 main frequency bands. Results: Compared with healthy controls, DRE patients exhibited significant increases in functional connectivity in the theta, alpha, beta, and gamma bands and significant reductions in the small-world measure in the theta and beta bands. During periods when patients' vagal nerve stimulators were turned on, DRE patients showed significant reductions in functional connectivity in the theta and alpha bands and a significant increase in the small-world measure in the theta band when compared with periods when patients' vagal nerve stimulators were turned off. Conclusions: Our results indicate that the brain networks of DRE patients were pathologically hypersynchronous and instantaneous VNS can decrease the synchronization of brain networks of epileptic patients, which might play a key role in the mechanism by which VNS reduces epileptic seizures. In the theta band, instantaneous VNS can increase the network efficiency of DRE patients, and the increment in network efficiency may be helpful for improving brain cognitive function in epileptic patients. Impact statement For the first time, we investigated the immediate effects of vagus nerve stimulation (VNS) in the brain networks of drug-resistant epilepsy patients using magnetoencephalography. Our results show that instantaneous VNS can decrease the hypersynchronization of epileptic networks and increase the network efficiency of epileptic patients. Our results are helpful in understanding the mechanism of action by which VNS reduces epileptic seizures and improves the cognitive function in epileptic patients and the brain network reorganization caused by long-term VNS.
Keywords: brain networks; drug-resistant epilepsy; functional connectivity; graph theory; magnetoencephalography; vagal nerve stimulation.