scholarly journals Automatic detection of fast oscillations (40–200Hz) in scalp EEG recordings

2012 ◽  
Vol 123 (4) ◽  
pp. 670-680 ◽  
Author(s):  
Nicolás von Ellenrieder ◽  
Luciana P. Andrade-Valença ◽  
François Dubeau ◽  
Jean Gotman
2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Amir Omidvarnia ◽  
Aaron E.L. Warren ◽  
Linda J. Dalic ◽  
Mangor Pedersen ◽  
John S. Archer ◽  
...  

AbstractObjectiveMark-up of generalized interictal epileptiform discharges (IEDs) on EEG is an important step in the diagnosis and characterization of epilepsy. However, manual EEG mark-up is a time-consuming, subjective, and highly specialized task where the human reviewer needs to visually inspect a large amount of data to facilitate accurate clinical decisions. The objective of this study was to develop a framework for automated detection of generalized paroxysmal fast activity (GPFA), which is a characteristic type of generalized IED seen in scalp EEG recordings of patients with Lennox-Gastaut syndrome (LGS), a severe form of drug-resistant generalized epilepsy.MethodsWe studied 13 children with LGS who had GPFA events in their interictal EEG recordings. Time-frequency information derived from manually marked IEDs across multiple EEG channels was used to automatically detect similar events in each patient’s interictal EEG. We validated true positives and false positives of the proposed spike detection approach using both standalone scalp EEG and simultaneous EEG-functional MRI (EEG-fMRI) recordings.ResultsGPFA events displayed a consistent low-high frequency arrangement in the time-frequency domain. This ‘bi-modal’ spectral feature was most prominent over frontal EEG channels. Our automatic detection approach using this feature identified likely epileptic events with similar time-frequency properties to the manually marked GPFAs. Brain maps of EEG-fMRI signal change during these automatically detected IEDs were comparable to the EEG-fMRI brain maps derived from manual IED mark-up.ConclusionGPFA events have a characteristic bi-modal time-frequency feature that can be automatically detected from scalp EEG recordings in patients with LGS. Validity of this time-frequency feature is demonstrated by EEG-fMRI analysis of automatically detected events, which recapitulates the brain maps we have previously shown to underlie generalized IEDs in LGS.SignificanceThis study provides a novel methodology that paves the way for quick, automated, and objective inspection of generalized IEDs in LGS. The proposed framework may be extendable to a wider range of epilepsy syndromes in which monitoring the burden of epileptic activity can aid clinical decision-making. For example, automated quantification of generalized discharges may permit faster assessment of treatment response and estimation of future seizure risk.


2021 ◽  
Vol 4 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Alireza Chamanzar ◽  
Marlene Behrmann ◽  
Pulkit Grover

AbstractA rapid and cost-effective noninvasive tool to detect and characterize neural silences can be of important benefit in diagnosing and treating many disorders. We propose an algorithm, SilenceMap, for uncovering the absence of electrophysiological signals, or neural silences, using noninvasive scalp electroencephalography (EEG) signals. By accounting for the contributions of different sources to the power of the recorded signals, and using a hemispheric baseline approach and a convex spectral clustering framework, SilenceMap permits rapid detection and localization of regions of silence in the brain using a relatively small amount of EEG data. SilenceMap substantially outperformed existing source localization algorithms in estimating the center-of-mass of the silence for three pediatric cortical resection patients, using fewer than 3 minutes of EEG recordings (13, 2, and 11mm vs. 25, 62, and 53 mm), as well for 100 different simulated regions of silence based on a real human head model (12 ± 0.7 mm vs. 54 ± 2.2 mm). SilenceMap paves the way towards accessible early diagnosis and continuous monitoring of altered physiological properties of human cortical function.


2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Jan Pyrzowski ◽  
Jean- Eudes Le Douget ◽  
Amal Fouad ◽  
Mariusz Siemiński ◽  
Joanna Jędrzejczak ◽  
...  

AbstractClinical diagnosis of epilepsy depends heavily on the detection of interictal epileptiform discharges (IEDs) from scalp electroencephalographic (EEG) signals, which by purely visual means is far from straightforward. Here, we introduce a simple signal analysis procedure based on scalp EEG zero-crossing patterns which can extract the spatiotemporal structure of scalp voltage fluctuations. We analyzed simultaneous scalp and intracranial EEG recordings from patients with pharmacoresistant temporal lobe epilepsy. Our data show that a large proportion of intracranial IEDs manifest only as subtle, low-amplitude waveforms below scalp EEG background and could, therefore, not be detected visually. We found that scalp zero-crossing patterns allow detection of these intracranial IEDs on a single-trial level with millisecond temporal precision and including some mesial temporal discharges that do not propagate to the neocortex. Applied to an independent dataset, our method discriminated accurately between patients with epilepsy and normal subjects, confirming its practical applicability.


2014 ◽  
Vol 24 (07) ◽  
pp. 1450023 ◽  
Author(s):  
LUNG-CHANG LIN ◽  
CHEN-SEN OUYANG ◽  
CHING-TAI CHIANG ◽  
REI-CHENG YANG ◽  
RONG-CHING WU ◽  
...  

Refractory epilepsy often has deleterious effects on an individual's health and quality of life. Early identification of patients whose seizures are refractory to antiepileptic drugs is important in considering the use of alternative treatments. Although idiopathic epilepsy is regarded as having a significantly lower risk factor of developing refractory epilepsy, still a subset of patients with idiopathic epilepsy might be refractory to medical treatment. In this study, we developed an effective method to predict the refractoriness of idiopathic epilepsy. Sixteen EEG segments from 12 well-controlled patients and 14 EEG segments from 11 refractory patients were analyzed at the time of first EEG recordings before antiepileptic drug treatment. Ten crucial EEG feature descriptors were selected for classification. Three of 10 were related to decorrelation time, and four of 10 were related to relative power of delta/gamma. There were significantly higher values in these seven feature descriptors in the well-controlled group as compared to the refractory group. On the contrary, the remaining three feature descriptors related to spectral edge frequency, kurtosis, and energy of wavelet coefficients demonstrated significantly lower values in the well-controlled group as compared to the refractory group. The analyses yielded a weighted precision rate of 94.2%, and a 93.3% recall rate. Therefore, the developed method is a useful tool in identifying the possibility of developing refractory epilepsy in patients with idiopathic epilepsy.


2021 ◽  
Vol Publish Ahead of Print ◽  
Author(s):  
Somin Lee ◽  
Shasha Wu ◽  
James X. Tao ◽  
Sandra Rose ◽  
Peter C. Warnke ◽  
...  

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Karla Burelo ◽  
Georgia Ramantani ◽  
Giacomo Indiveri ◽  
Johannes Sarnthein

Abstract Background: Interictal High Frequency Oscillations (HFO) are measurable in scalp EEG. This has aroused interest in investigating their potential as biomarkers of epileptogenesis, seizure propensity, disease severity, and treatment response. The demand for therapy monitoring in epilepsy has kindled interest in compact wearable electronic devices for long- term EEG recording. Spiking neural networks (SNN) have been shown to be optimal architectures for being embedded in compact low-power signal processing hardware. Methods: We analyzed 20 scalp EEG recordings from 11 patients with pediatric focal lesional epilepsy. We designed a custom SNN to detect events of interest (EoI) in the 80-250 Hz ripple band and reject artifacts in the 500-900 Hz band. Results: We identified the optimal SNN parameters to automatically detect EoI and reject artifacts. The occurrence of HFO thus detected was associated with active epilepsy with 80% accuracy. The HFO rate mirrored the decrease in seizure frequency in 8 patients (p = 0.0047). Overall, the HFO rate correlated with seizure frequency (rho = 0.83, p < 0.0001, Spearman’s correlation).Conclusions: The fully automated SNN detected clinically relevant HFO in the scalp EEG. This is a further step towards non-invasive epilepsy monitoring with a low-power wearable device.


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