Drug-resistant epilepsy affects millions of people worldwide and remains one of the most difficult neurological disorders to treat. For patients whose seizures continue despite medication, surgical removal of the tissue causing the seizures may be effective.
However, surgery is not always possible, particularly when the epileptogenic zone overlaps with areas responsible for critical functions such as language or movement. Stereoencephalography-guided radiofrequency thermocoagulation (RF-TC) uses implanted electrodes to deliver targeted thermal lesions, offering a potential treatment option with reduced surgical burden and recovery time.
A research team led by Professor Haifeng Shu and Dr. Xin Chen from the Department of Neurosurgery, College of Medicine, General Hospital of Western Theater Command, Southwest Jiaotong University, China, investigated how RF-TC changes communication pathways within the brain and whether these changes are associated with improvement in seizures.
By analyzing functional connectivity before and after treatment, the team sought to understand whether RF-TC acts as more than a local tissue destruction process. This paper was made available online and published in Volume 12, Article Number 9 of Chinese Journal of Neurosurgery on March 12, 2026.
Researchers retrospectively studied 17 patients with medically refractory epilepsy who underwent stereo-electroencephalographic monitoring followed by RF-TC. They looked at resting-state recordings collected before and immediately after treatment.
Using advanced signal analysis, they measured how strongly different brain regions synchronized in the delta, theta, alpha, beta and gamma frequency bands. They also applied graph theory methods to assess whether important communication nodes in the seizure networks became weaker or reorganized after detailed processing.
The most significant effects were seen in the alpha frequency band, which is often associated with stable long-range brain communication. After RF-TC, connectivity both within epileptic zones and between these zones and other sampled regions was significantly reduced.
Several properties of the network also changed, including reduced betweenness centrality, suggesting that pathways driving seizures became less dominant after treatment. These findings support the idea that RF-TC may disrupt abnormal network synchrony rather than simply destroying a small target region locally.
Clinical outcomes also mattered. Patients who did not achieve significant seizure reduction showed stronger decreases in alpha and theta band connectivity, suggesting broader but less beneficial network disruption. In contrast, patients who improved showed increased gamma-band clustering, which may reflect healthier reorganization of the local circuit following weakening of pathological pathways after treatment.
RF-TC appears to affect the epileptic brain as a network therapy and not just a focal lesion. Early post-treatment electrophysiological signals may help clinicians understand whether the intervention is likely to be successful.”
Haifeng Shu, Professor, Department of Neurosurgery, College of Medicine, Western Theater General Hospital, Southwest Jiaotong University
The findings may have immediate practical value. If brief post-procedure recordings can predict response, doctors may be able to assess efficacy earlier and adjust treatment strategies accordingly. This may include considering additional interventions or alternative treatments in a more timely manner.
The study also has broader implications for neuroscience and precision medicine. Understanding how targeted heat therapy remodels dysfunctional circuits may guide future collaborations between neurosurgeons, engineers, imaging specialists and computer scientists working on personalized treatments for epilepsy and other brain disorders worldwide.
Dr. Chen added, “Our long-term goal is to combine brain network analysis with personalized intervention design so that each patient receives the most effective and least invasive treatment.”
While the authors note that larger prospective studies are still needed, the current results suggest that RF-TC may represent an important step toward network-guided epilepsy care worldwide.
Source:
Journal Reference:
Shen, D., et al (2026) Alteration of functional connectivity and network properties after radiofrequency thermocoagulation-guided stereo-electroencephalography. Chinese Journal of Neurosurgery. DOI:10.1186/s41016-026-00428-8. https://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s41016-026-00428-8.
