PhD Thesis in Human physiology - Epilepsy – Sleep Medicine

Updated: about 2 months ago
Location: Lyon, RHONE ALPES
Job Type: FullTime
Deadline: 31 May 2024

4 Mar 2024
Job Information
Organisation/Company

Lyon 1 University
Department

Lyon's Neurosciences Research Center
Research Field

Neurosciences » Neurophysiology
Medical sciences » Other
Researcher Profile

First Stage Researcher (R1)
Country

France
Application Deadline

31 May 2024 - 23:00 (Europe/Paris)
Type of Contract

Temporary
Job Status

Full-time
Offer Starting Date

4 Nov 2024
Is the job funded through the EU Research Framework Programme?

HE / ERC
Reference Number

ERC-2023-COG
Is the Job related to staff position within a Research Infrastructure?

No

Offer Description

                                            PhD THESIS IN  HUMAN PHYSIOLOGY - EPILEPSY – SLEEP MEDICINE

 

PROJECT TITLE

AROUSAL AND RESPIRATORY CO-DYSFUNCTION IN DRUG-RESISTANT EPILEPSY

This PhD thesis is integrated within the framework of the ERC funded project EPIAROUSAL (PI Pr S. Rheims)

 

PHD SUPERVISORS AND HOST TEAMS

The project will be jointly supervised by two senior researchers

  • Pr Sylvain RHEIMS
    • Team co-leader and Professor of Neurology at Lyon 1 University and Hospices Civils de Lyon and Head of Epilepsy Department at Hospices Civils de Lyon
    • Translational Group in Epilepsy Research (TIGER team) , Lyon’s Neurosciences Research Center (CRNL), INSERM U1028 – CNRS UMR 5292 – Lyon 1 University
  • Dr Emeric STAUFFER
    • Researcher at LIBM and Head of the Respiratory Functional Investigation & Physical Activity Department, Hospices Civils de Lyon
    • Team « Vascular Biology and Red Blood Cell », Inter-university Laboratory of Human Movement Biology (LIBM ) EA7424, Lyon 1 University

Other researcher involved in the project: Pr Laure Peter-Derex, Professor of Phyiology and expert in Sleep Medicine at Lyon 1 University and Hospices Civils de Lyon.

 

BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES

Both seizures and their complications are modulated by patients’ vigilance states. Several epilepsy complications are associated with sleep, including Sudden and Unexpected Death in Epilepsy (SUDEP). SUDEP primarily results from a fatal postictal central apnea after a nocturnal generalized convulsive seizures. Reducing the severity of postictal respiratory dysfunction has thus appeared as one of the most promising ways to prevent SUDEP. However, no encouraging result has been reported yet, suggesting that epilepsy-related respiratory dysfunction may only be the tip of the iceberg. Given the numerous interconnections between the network that regulates arousal and sleep and the respiratory network, one might make the hypothesis that some patients with drug-resistant epilepsy might combine this well-known seizure-related respiratory dysfunction with a chronic alteration of arousal regulation, resulting in abnormal asphyxia-induced arousal. Adenosine system is deeply implicated in the regulation of sleep and central respiratory control and is modulated by seizures. Epilepsy-related alteration of the brainstem adenosine pathway may play a key role in the development of arousal and respiratory co-dysfunction. The PhD project will thus study the interplay between epilepsy-related respiratory dysfunction, arousal regulation and the brainstem adenosine pathway

 

PROJECT ORGANIZATION

The PhD project will be conducted in adult patients with drug-resistant epilepsy and healthy controls in two parallel clinical studies which will aim

        1. To assess the arousal reactivity in drug-resistant epilepsy, with a specific emphasis on asphyxia-induced arousal

The PhD student will be directly in charge of investigating in healthy subjects and patients with epilepsy undergoing a Video-EEG monitoring of 48 hours duration the relation between the respiratory-driven arousal reactivity and alterations of inter-ictal respiratory functioning, defined as alterations of hypercapnic ventilatory response.

        2. To investigate the impact of epilepsy on the brainstem adenosine pathway and its relation with arousal and respiratory reactivity.

This study will be based on the same physiological approach as Study #1 but associated with multimodal imaging. Combining brainstem mapping of adenosine receptors with PET/MR and of individual fMRI BOLD response to hypercapnia will allow to assess for the first time in vivo if distribution of adenosine receptors in the brainstem respiratory centers varies between patients with drug-resistant epilepsy and healthy subjects.

During the last period of the her/his project, the PhD student will also be deeply involved in the design and conduct of the EPIAROUSAL trial, a proof-of-concept trial which will aim to validate that adenosine-targeted therapy can restore normal asphyxia-induced arousal in patients with drug-resistant epilepsy.

 

REQUIRED PAST EXPERIENCE

Master degree in Neurosciences or Physiology

Basic knowledge of EEG in Humans

Past experience in study(ies) conducted in Humans.

 

ADMINISTRATIVE ORGANIZATION

Start date: October – December 2024

Doctoral school : Neurosciences and Cognition (ED476)

Employer : Lyon 1 University. 3-year contract. Salary : 1687 € / month

 


Requirements
Research Field
Neurosciences » Neurophysiology
Education Level
Master Degree or equivalent

Skills/Qualifications

Master degree in Neurosciences or Physiology

Basic knowledge of EEG in Humans

Past experience in study(ies) conducted in Humans.


Languages
ENGLISH
Level
Good

Languages
FRENCH
Level
Basic

Research Field
Neurosciences » Neurophysiology

Internal Application form(s) needed
PhD_HumanPhysiology.pdf
English
(325.87 KB - PDF)
Download
Additional Information
Work Location(s)
Number of offers available
1
Company/Institute
Lyon's Neurosciences Research Center (INSERM U1028/CNRS UMR5292 / Lyon 1 University
Country
France
City
Lyon
Geofield


Where to apply
E-mail

[email protected]

Contact
City

Lyon
Website

https://www.univ-lyon1.fr/en
Street

59 boulevard Pinel

STATUS: EXPIRED