Login / Signup

Short-Term Changes in Hypsarrhythmia Assessed by Spectral Analysis: Group and Individual Assessments.

Jessica M FarinhaPeter R BartelPiet J BeckerLynton T Hazelhurst
Published in: Clinical EEG and neuroscience (2024)
Objectives: To perform spectral analysis on previously recorded electroencephalograms (EEGs) containing hypsarrhythmia in an initial recording and to assess changes in spectral power (µV 2 ) in a follow-up recording after a period of 10-25 days. Methods: Fifty participants, aged 2-39 months, with hypsarrhythmia in an initial recording (R1), were compared with regard to their spectral findings in a later recording (R2). Typically, anticonvulsant therapy was initiated or modified after R1. Average delta, theta, alpha, and beta power was derived from approximately 3 min of artifact-free EEG data recorded from 19 electrode derivations. Group and individual changes in delta power between R1 and R2 formed the main analyses. Results: Delta accounted for 84% of the total power. In group comparisons, median delta power decreased statistically significantly between R1 and R2 in all 19 derivations, for example, from 3940 µV 2 in R1 to 1722 µV 2 in R2, Cz derivation. When assessing individual participants, delta power decreases in R2 were >50% in 60% of the participants, but <25% in 24% of the participants. Conclusion: Spectral analysis may be used as an additional tool for providing a potential biomarker in the assessment of short-term changes in hypsarrhythmia, including the effects of treatment.
Keyphrases
  • optical coherence tomography
  • dual energy
  • working memory
  • stem cells
  • magnetic resonance imaging
  • deep learning
  • combination therapy