Abstract
Notwithstanding recent advances in neuroimaging, EEG remains a major technique for investigation of the brain. Its main applications are in assessment of cerebral function rather than for detecting structural abnormalities. The principal clinical applications are in epilepsy, states of altered consciousness including postanoxic and traumatic coma, the parasomnias, dementias, toxic confusional states, cerebral infections, and various other encephalopathies. Abnormalities in EEG reflect general pathophysiological processes, raised intracranial pressure, cerebral anoxia, or oedema, epileptogenesis etc, and show little specificity for a particular disease. Consequently, they need to be interpreted in a particular clinical context; the use of routine EEG examination for screening purposes is rarely of value. Conversely, the investigation becomes most cost effective when applied to specific problems--for instance, monitoring serial changes in postanoxic coma or during open heart surgery, differential diagnosis (by telemetric ictal recordings) of epileptic and non-epileptic attacks, and providing early prediction of outcome after stroke. High technological standards and an individualised problem solving approach are prerequisites of a cost effective, reliable clinical EEG service. These are most likely to be achieved by a considered, selective referral policy, the use where necessary of prolonged complex procedures such as telemetry, and the avoidance of routine examinations of dubious clinical relevance.
Keywords
Affiliated Institutions
Related Publications
Multiway analysis of epilepsy tensors
Abstract Motivation: The success or failure of an epilepsy surgery depends greatly on the localization of epileptic focus (origin of a seizure). We address the problem of identi...
Nonlinear Classification of EEG Data for Seizure Detection
We address the problem of classification of EEG recordings for the detection of epileptic seizures. We assume that the EEG measurements can be described by a low dimensional man...
Abnormal Cortical Activation During Planning of Voluntary Movement in Patients with Epilepsy with Focal Motor Seizures: Event‐Related Desynchronization Study of Electroencephalographic mu Rhythm
Summary: Purpose: The spatiotemporal distribution of EEG mu rhythm desynchronization was analyzed in patients with partial epilepsy to determine whether frequent focal motor sei...
A Proposed Diagnostic Scheme for People with Epileptic Seizures and with Epilepsy: Report of the ILAE Task Force on Classification and Terminology
The International League Against Epilepsy (ILAE) made a major contribution when it established standardized classifications and terminology for epileptic seizures and syndromes....
A sound conceptual framework for an epilepsy classification is still lacking
The classification of epileptic seizures and epilepsies is recognized as a major International League Against Epilepsy (ILAE) contribution and has been repeatedly updated during...
Publication Info
- Year
- 1994
- Type
- review
- Volume
- 57
- Issue
- 11
- Pages
- 1308-1319
- Citations
- 232
- Access
- Closed
External Links
Social Impact
Social media, news, blog, policy document mentions
Citation Metrics
Cite This
Identifiers
- DOI
- 10.1136/jnnp.57.11.1308