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Electroencephalography

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Title: PowerPoint Presentation Last modified by: Doc. MUDr. Valja Kellerov , DrSc. Created Date: 1/1/1601 12:00:00 AM Document presentation format – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Electroencephalography


1
Electroencephalography
  • doc. MUDr. Valja Kellerová, DrSc.
  • Department of Neurology

2
Principle of EEG
  • EEG examines the spontaneous electrical activity
    of the brain by means of scalp electrodes
  • recording procedure amplification
  • recording (20 minutes at least)
  • storage (on CD, DVD,
  • NAS, cloud )
  •  

3
Electrode placement the ten-twenty electrode
system
4
Principle of registration
  • EEG curve is registered/recalculated as the
    difference of electric potentials between two
    electrodes (varying in the course of time)
  • derivation recording from a pair of electrodes
    (two electrodes are connected to a single
    amplifier, to one EEG channel)
  • bipolar
  • monopolar

5
Montages
  • montage a particular electrode arrangement,
  • a number of different derivations is diplayed
    simultaneously
  • commonly used and preset montages
  • longitudinal
  • transverse
  • ( referential )

6
EEG reading
  • Morphology
  • Amplitude
  • Frequency

7
EEG reading morphology (wave shape)
  • sharp waves
  • spikes epileptiform patterns,
  • spike-and-wave complexes they accompany epilepsy

8
EEG reading amplitude
  • voltage in microvolts
  • a peak-to-peak measurement
  • compared with the calibration signal
  • commonly 20 -100 µV (in normal EEG)
  • amplitude changes may be pathological

9
EEG reading frequency
  • the rhythmic EEG activity is classified as
  • delta - less than 4 Hz
  • theta 4 to 8 Hz
  • alpha 8 to 13 Hz
  • beta more than 13 Hz

10
Normal rhythms
  • Alpha rhythm
  • sinusoidal waves (8-13 Hz)
  • maximal over the posterior head region
    (occipitally)
  • occurs during wakefulness and relaxation
  • best seen with the patients eyes closed
  • blocked or attenuated with eye opening

11
Normal rhythms
  • Beta rhythm
  • is not prominent
  • has low amplitude
  • is best seen frontally
  • not affected by eye opening
  • Theta rhythm
  • a small amount, of low amplitude, frontally
  • accompanies drowsiness
  • Delta rhythm
  • is normal during deep sleep
  • is normal in childhood
  • is abnormal in the other cases

12
The normal EEG awake EEG in adults
  • typical normal EEG
  • alpha rhythm
  • the posterior dominant rhythm
  • blocked with eyes opening
  • Frontally beta and theta low amplitude activity

13
The normal EEG awake EEG in adults
  • low voltage EEG (atypical flat EEG)
  • a variety of normal finding
  • 10 of normal healthy adults
  • no activity over 20 µV
  • various frequencies may be present
  • alpha rhythm may be absent

14
The normal EEG during drowsiness and NREM sleep
Drowsiness - somnolence
disappearance of the alpha rhythm low voltage
beta activity or flat recording low voltage
theta (5-6 Hz) 3-4 Hz (moderate
amplitude) paradoxical reaction to eye opening
(alpha rhythm appears)
15
The normal EEG EEG during drowsiness and sleep -
NREM sleep
  • Sleep stage 2
  • slow waves 3-4 Hz continue

sleep spindles (12-14-16 Hz) and K complexes
(reaction to stimuli)
16
The normal EEG EEG during drowsiness and sleep -
NREM sleep
  • Sleep stage 3
  • slow waves of 2 Hz or less, of high amplitude
    (20-50 of the recording time)
  • Sleep stage 4
  • slow activity of about 1 Hz (over 50)

17
The normal EEG EEG during drowsiness and sleep -
REM sleep
  • REM sleep (paradoxical sleep)
  • associated with dreaming
  • asynchronous low voltage waves of mixed frequency
  • may resemble the pattern of stage 1

18
Polysomnography
  • For reliable determination of REM stage
    polysomnography is necessary with recording also
  • rapid eye movements
  • heart rate and breathing
  • EMG of the mental muscles (postural) tonic
    activity disappears in the REM stage

19
Polysomnographyin NREM and REM sleep
20
Polysomnography in REM sleep (patient with
narcolepsy)
21
Sleep cycles
  • Sleep cycles
  • last about 80-120 minutes
  • NREM sleep lasts about 60-90 minutes
  • REM sleep lasts about 10-30 minutes (it is longer
    in the morning)

22
Abnormal EEG patterns
  • abnormalities of the background rhythms (areal
    differentiation, hemispheral organization)
  • abnormal sleep patterns narcolepsy
  • paroxysmal epileptiform abnormalities
    (generalized, focal) - epilepsy
  • abnormal slow activity (generalized, focal)
    structural cerebral lesions
  • amplitude changes

23
Narcolepsy
24
Abnormal sleep patterns - narcolepsy
  • short latency to sleep onset (less than 5 min)
  • sleep onset REM periods
  • multiple sleep latency test (MSLT)
  • gives a patient 5 opportunities to fall asleep
    during the day
  • at 2-hour intervals EEG is recorded and the
    patient is given 20 min to fall asleep
  • if 2 or more sleep periods contain REM sleep,
    then a diagnosis of narcolepsy is highly likely

25
Abnormal EEG amplitude changes
  • local - reduction of amplitude due to
  • superficial lesions in the cortex, rare
  • change of material between cortex and electrodes
    subdural hematoma - flattening

26
Abnormal EEG amplitude changes
  • generalized in deep coma
  • burst-suppression pattern or flat record

27
EEG in epilepsy
  • interictal patterns in intervals without
    seizures
  • epileptiform patterns sharp waves, spikes,
    spike-and-wave complexes
  • local, as a focus
  • or generalized
  • ictal patterns during seizure

28
Interictal patterns in epilepsy localfocus
29
Interictal patterns in epilepsy generalized
30
Ictal patterns depend on the type of the seizure
31
Simple partial seizures - consciousness is not
impaired- Jacksonian motor or somatosensory
seizure
32
Simple partial seizures -single repetitive sharp
waves
33
Complex partial seizurestemporal lobe seizure
with automatisms
34
Complex partial seizures -sharp theta waves 6Hz
temporal region
35
Generalized absence seizures
36
Absence seizures 3/sec generalized
spike-and-wave discharges
37
Absence seizures
38
Generalized tonic-clonic seizures
39
Generalized tonic-clonic seizures
  • Tonic phase generalized hypersynchronous 8-12Hz
    sharp waves and muscle artifacts
  • clonic phase generalized rhythmic spikes form
    groups, followed by a slow wave
  • postictal coma lower voltage arrhythmic
    activity, attenuation and slowing or flat EEG

40
Generalized tonic-clonic seizure tonic and
clonic phase
41
Generalized tonic-clonic seizure clonic and
postictal phase
42
EEG in structural cerebral lesions
  • Tumours
  • Abscesses
  • Contusions
  • Strokes
  • cause mainly local slow waves (theta or delta),
    they form a focus of slow waves

43
EEG in structural cerebral lesions
44
Brain tumours
  • supratentorial
  • focal slow waves (irregular, persistent delta)
  • principles of localization of large tumours
    phase reversal
  • deep or infratentorial
  • episodes of synchronous slow waves theta or delta

45
Phase reversal
46
Phase reversal
47
Activation procedures
  • Hyperventilation
  • in all patients, 4 minutes
  • absence of any change is normal
  • abnormal responses include epileptiform activity
  • intermittent photic stimulation
  • sleep recordings after sleep deprivation

48
intermittent photic stimulation
  • rhythmic flashes, 1 - 30 Hz
  • normal response photic driving, reproduction of
    the rhythm - mostly frequencies of alpha,
    partially beta

49
intermittent photic stimulation
  • photic driving increases
  • Hyperthyroidism
  • tumours in the posterior fossa
  • Migraine (fast beta)
  • abnormal photo convulsive response
    (epileptiform activity)

50
sleep recordings after sleep deprivation
  • drowsiness and light sleep (stages 1 and 2 of
    NREM sleep) accentuate epileptiform abnormalities
  • all night sleep deprivation is required prior to
    taking the EEG

51
Easy, isnt it ?
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