1. The Yield of Ambulatory EEG-Video Monitoring.
- Author
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Primiani CT, Rivera-Cruz A, Trudeau P, Sullivan L, MacIver S, and Benbadis SR
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Child, Cohort Studies, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Monitoring, Ambulatory, Monitoring, Physiologic, Retrospective Studies, Electroencephalography, Epilepsy diagnosis
- Abstract
Introduction: The availability of ambulatory EEG-video monitoring gives an alternative to traditional inpatient EEG-video, but its yield and diagnostic value are not well known. This study evaluates the yield of ambulatory EEG-video for the diagnosis of epilepsy., Methods: We retrospectively reviewed the ambulatory EEG-video monitoring data from 200 consecutive and unselected patients aged 12 years and older performed by a single company (RSC Diagnostic Services) between January 2018 and May 2018. Studies were processed by two senior certified long-term monitoring EEG technologists and interpreted by neurologists., Results: Of the 200 patients, 130 (65%) were women, mean age was 45 years. Mean duration of studies were 76.6 hours (range 23-175 hours). There were 110 studies (55%) with events recorded and 101 (92%) were captured on video. Epileptic events accounted for 17.8% (18/101) of the events captured and 9% (18/200) of our total cohort. Nonepileptic diagnosis accounted for 38% of the total number of patients in study (76/200)., Conclusion: Ambulatory EEG-video monitoring may be a useful alternative to inpatient epilepsy monitoring unit, particularly with high clinical suspicion for nonepileptic events.
- Published
- 2021
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