20 results on '"F Brunnhuber"'
Search Results
2. P466: Home video-telemetry (HVT) is superior to inpatient video-telemetry (VT)
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F. Brunnhuber, D. Amin, R. Singh, Mark P. Richardson, Nandini Mullatti, and I. Manidakis
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Neurology ,business.industry ,Physiology (medical) ,Telemetry ,Medicine ,Neurology (clinical) ,Medical emergency ,business ,medicine.disease ,Sensory Systems - Published
- 2014
3. P400: Home Video Telemetry vs Inpatient Telemetry – an evaluative comparison
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R. Luz, F. Brunnhuber, and Sutapa Biswas
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Communication ,Neurology ,Computer science ,business.industry ,Physiology (medical) ,Telemetry ,medicine ,Neurology (clinical) ,Medical emergency ,medicine.disease ,business ,Sensory Systems - Published
- 2014
4. FC21.2 Usefulness of early EEG in predicting outcome in term neonates with hypoxic ischaemic encephalopathy
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F. Brunnhuber, S. Goyal, R. Arunachalam, and Denise Flexney-Briscoe
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medicine.medical_specialty ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Electroencephalography ,Term neonates ,Sensory Systems ,Hypoxic ischaemic encephalopathy ,Neurology ,Physiology (medical) ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Cardiology ,Neurology (clinical) ,business - Published
- 2006
5. PA.01 The dorsal hippocampal commissure: when the functionality matters
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Antonio Valentin, S Beniczky, Gonzalo Alarcón, Ivana Rosenzweig, and F Brunnhuber
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medicine.diagnostic_test ,Seizure types ,Hippocampus ,Human brain ,Anatomy ,Hippocampal formation ,Electroencephalography ,medicine.disease ,Hippocampal commissure ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Epilepsy ,Seizure onset ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,medicine ,Surgery ,Neurology (clinical) ,Psychology ,Neuroscience - Abstract
Aims The human hippocampal phylogeny is manifested by near or total disappearance of ventral hippocampal commissure. In contrast, the dorsal hippocampal commissure, although considered controversial and vehemently disputed by some groups, is believed to present a functional pathway in the human brain. Methods Gloor et al in 1993 proposed that, in humans, the spread though the dorsal hippocampal commissure is the only likely pathway of contralateral propagation for seizure discharges originating in mesial temporal structures with spread to the contralateral hippocampus. Results We report an unusual case of a patient with refractory temporal epilepsy (TLE) with several seizure types who underwent a comprehensive presurgical evaluation due to non-concordant results between various investigative modalities. Conclusions It is postulated here that repeated false lateralisation of seizure onset by extracranial EEG recordings in our patient might have been instigated by the distinct patterns of seizure spread utilising the dorsal hippocampal commissure.
- Published
- 2011
6. P02.14 Sreda in children – A report of two cases
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P. Muthinji, F. Brunnhuber, A. Osei-Lah, and A. Ponnusamy
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Neurology ,Physiology (medical) ,Neurology (clinical) ,Sensory Systems - Published
- 2006
7. The unforeseen future: Impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic on home video-EEG telemetry.
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Brunnhuber F, Slater JD, Goyal S, Amin D, and Winston JS
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- Humans, Pandemics, Retrospective Studies, Video Recording methods, Electroencephalography methods, Telemetry methods, COVID-19, Epilepsy diagnosis, Epilepsy epidemiology
- Abstract
The coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic had widespread impact on health care systems globally-particularly services arranged around elective admission and attendance such as epilepsy monitoring units and home video-EEG telemetry (HVET). Here, we review the ongoing impacts of the pandemic on HVET services among several different providers who used different initial models of HVET. We discuss the features of HVET that led to success in providing continued diagnostic services to patients with epilepsy and related disorders and through retrospective audit of our services demonstrate the high diagnostic yield of HVET. We reflect on this unforeseen future and its implications for other diagnostic techniques and approaches., (© 2022 The Authors. Epilepsia published by Wiley Periodicals LLC on behalf of International League Against Epilepsy.)
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- 2023
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8. Limited clinical validity of univariate resting-state EEG markers for classifying seizure disorders.
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Faiman I, Sparks R, Winston JS, Brunnhuber F, Ciulini N, Young AH, and Shotbolt P
- Abstract
Differentiating between epilepsy and psychogenic non-epileptic seizures presents a considerable challenge in clinical practice, resulting in frequent misdiagnosis, unnecessary treatment and long diagnostic delays. Quantitative markers extracted from resting-state EEG may reveal subtle neurophysiological differences that are diagnostically relevant. Two observational, retrospective diagnostic accuracy studies were performed to test the clinical validity of univariate resting-state EEG markers for the differential diagnosis of epilepsy and psychogenic non-epileptic seizures. Clinical EEG data were collected for 179 quasi-consecutive patients (age > 18) with a suspected diagnosis of epilepsy or psychogenic non-epileptic seizures who were medication-naïve at the time of EEG; 148 age- and gender-matched patients subsequently received a diagnosis from specialist clinicians and were included in the analyses. Study 1 is a hypothesis-driven study testing the ability of theta power and peak alpha frequency to classify people with epilepsy and people with psychogenic non-epileptic seizures, with an advanced machine learning pipeline. The next study (Study 2) is data-driven; a high number of quantitative EEG features are extracted and a similar machine learning approach as Study 1 assesses whether previously unexplored univariate EEG measures show promise as diagnostic markers. The results of Study 1 suggest that EEG markers that were previously identified as promising diagnostic indicators (i.e. theta power and peak alpha frequency) have limited clinical validity for the classification of epilepsy and psychogenic non-epileptic seizures (mean accuracy: 48%). The results of Study 2 indicate that identifying univariate markers that show good correlation with a categorical diagnostic label is challenging (mean accuracy: 45-60%). This is due to a considerable overlap in neurophysiological features between the diagnostic classes considered in this study, and to the presence of more dominant EEG dynamics such as alterations due to temporal proximity to epileptiform discharges. Markers that were identified in the context of previous epilepsy research using visually normal resting-state EEG were found to have limited clinical validity for the classification task of distinguishing between people with epilepsy and people with psychogenic non-epileptic seizures. A search for alternative diagnostic markers uncovered the challenges involved and generated recommendations for further research., Competing Interests: The authors report no competing interests., (© The Author(s) 2023. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Guarantors of Brain.)
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- 2023
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9. The role of the electroencephalogram (EEG) in determining the aetiology of catatonia: a systematic review and meta-analysis of diagnostic test accuracy.
- Author
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Hosseini P, Whincup R, Devan K, Ghanem DA, Fanshawe JB, Saini A, Cross B, Vijay A, Mastellari T, Vivekananda U, White S, Brunnhuber F, Zandi MS, David AS, Carter B, Oliver D, Lewis G, Fry C, Mehta PR, Stanton B, and Rogers JP
- Abstract
Background: Catatonia is a psychomotor syndrome that has a wide range of aetiologies. Determining whether catatonia is due to a medical or psychiatric cause is important for directing treatment but is clinically challenging. We aimed to ascertain the performance of the electroencephalogram (EEG) in determining whether catatonia has a medical or psychiatric cause, conventionally defined., Methods: In this systematic review and meta-analysis of diagnostic test accuracy (PROSPERO CRD42021239027), Medline, EMBASE, PsycInfo, and AMED were searched from inception to May 11, 2022 for articles published in peer-reviewed journals that reported EEG findings in catatonia of a medical or psychiatric origin and were reported in English, French, or Italian. Eligible study types were clinical trials, cohort studies, case-control studies, cross-sectional studies, case series, and case reports. The reference standard was the final clinical diagnosis. Data extraction was conducted using individual patient-level data, where available, by two authors. We prespecified two types of studies to overcome the limitations anticipated in the data: larger studies ( n ≥ 5), which were suitable for formal meta-analytic methods but generally lacked detailed information about participants, and smaller studies ( n < 5), which were unsuitable for formal meta-analytic methods but had detailed individual patient level data, enabling additional sensitivity analyses. Risk of bias and applicability were assessed with the QUADAS-2 tool for larger studies, and with a published tool designed for case reports and series for smaller studies. The primary outcomes were sensitivity and specificity, which were derived using a bivariate mixed-effects regression model., Findings: 355 studies were included, spanning 707 patients. Of the 12 larger studies (5 cohort studies and 7 case series), 308 patients were included with a mean age of 48.2 (SD = 8.9) years. 85 (52.8%) were reported as male and 99 had catatonia due to a general medical condition. In the larger studies, we found that an abnormal EEG predicted a medical cause of catatonia with a sensitivity of 0.82 (95% CI 0.67-0.91) and a specificity of 0.66 (95% CI 0.45-0.82) with an I
2 of 74% (95% CI 42-100%). The area under the summary ROC curve offered excellent discrimination (AUC = 0.83). The positive likelihood ratio was 2.4 (95% CI 1.4-4.1) and the negative likelihood ratio was 0.28 (95% CI 0.15-0.51). Only 5 studies had low concerns in terms of risk of bias and applicability, but a sensitivity analysis limited to these studies was similar to the main analysis. Among the 343 smaller studies, 399 patients were included, resulting in a sensitivity of 0.76 (95% CI 0.71-0.81), specificity of 0.67 (0.57-0.76) and AUC = 0.71 (95% CI 0.67-0.76). In multiple sensitivity analyses, the results were robust to the exclusion of reports of studies and individuals considered at high risk of bias. Features of limbic encephalitis, epileptiform discharges, focal abnormality, or status epilepticus were highly specific to medical catatonia, but features of encephalopathy had only moderate specificity and occurred in 23% of the cases of psychiatric catatonia in smaller studies., Interpretation: In cases of diagnostic uncertainty, the EEG should be used alongside other investigations to ascertain whether the underlying cause of catatonia is medical. The main limitation of this review is the differing thresholds for considering an EEG abnormal between studies., Funding: Wellcome Trust, NIHR Biomedical Research Centre at University College London Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust., Competing Interests: G.L. declares payments made to his institution by the Wellcome Trust and the NIHR UCLH BRC. J.P.R. declare payments to his institution for his salary by the Wellcome Trust. M.S.Z. declares salary support to support research time from the NIHR UCLH BRC. M.S.Z. declares honoraria for one lecture each for each of the four mentioned in the last three years: Norwegian Neurological Society; Copenhagen Neuropsychological Society, Rigshospitalet; Cygnet Healthcare; and UCB Pharma. M.S.Z. declares travel and hotel support for a stay in Florence from the European Association of Neurology (EAN) for an EAN meeting on autoimmune encephalitis in April 2022. M.S.Z. represents neurology in the UK for the Association of British Neurologists for matters related to Covid in meetings with NHS England and Royal College of Physicians. All other authors declare no competing interests., (© 2022 The Author(s).)- Published
- 2023
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10. Past, Present and Future of Home video-electroencephalographic telemetry: A review of the development of in-home video-electroencephalographic recordings.
- Author
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Brunnhuber F, Slater J, Goyal S, Amin D, Thorvardsson G, Freestone DR, and Richardson MP
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- Electroencephalography trends, Humans, Monitoring, Ambulatory trends, Telemetry trends, Video Recording instrumentation, Video Recording trends, Electroencephalography instrumentation, Monitoring, Ambulatory instrumentation, Seizures diagnosis, Telemetry instrumentation
- Abstract
Video-electroencephalographic (EEG) monitoring is an essential tool in epileptology, conventionally carried out in a hospital epilepsy monitoring unit. Due to high costs and long waiting times for hospital admission, coupled with technological advances, several centers have developed and implemented video-EEG monitoring in the patient's home (home video-EEG telemetry [HVET]). Here, we review the history and current status of three general approaches to HVET: (1) supervised HVET, which entails setting up video-EEG in the patient's home with daily visiting technologist support; (2) mobile HVET (also termed ambulatory video-EEG), which entails attaching electrodes in a health care facility, supplying the patient and carers with the hardware and instructions, and then asking the patient and carer to set up recording at home without technologist support; and (3) cloud-based HVET, which adds to either of the previous models continuous streaming of video-EEG from the home to the health care provider, with the option to review data in near real time, troubleshoot hardware remotely, and interact remotely with the patient. Our experience shows that HVET can be highly cost-effective and is well received by patients. We note limitations related to long-term electrode attachment and correct camera placing while the patient is unsupervised at home, and concerns related to regulations regarding data privacy for cloud services. We believe that HVET opens significant new opportunities for research, especially in the field of understanding the many influences in seizure occurrence. We speculate that in the future HVET may merge into innovative new multisensor approaches to continuously monitoring people with epilepsy., (© 2020 International League Against Epilepsy.)
- Published
- 2020
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11. Non-convulsive status epilepticus: COVID-19 or clozapine induced?
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Sokolov E, Hadavi S, Mantoan Ritter L, and Brunnhuber F
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- COVID-19, Clozapine therapeutic use, Diagnosis, Differential, Electroencephalography methods, Female, Humans, Middle Aged, Pandemics, SARS-CoV-2, Status Epilepticus physiopathology, Antipsychotic Agents adverse effects, Betacoronavirus, Clozapine adverse effects, Coronavirus Infections complications, Pneumonia, Viral complications, Psychotic Disorders drug therapy, Status Epilepticus etiology
- Abstract
We present a case of non-convulsive status epilepticus in a 57-year-old woman with a schizoaffective disorder, without an antecedent seizure history, with two possible aetiologies including SARS-CoV-2 infection and clozapine uptitration. We discuss the presentation, investigations, differential diagnosis and management. In particular, we focus on the electroencephalogram (EEG) findings seen in this case and the electroclinical response to antiepileptic medication. We review the literature and discuss the relevance of this case to the SARS-CoV-2 global pandemic. We emphasise the importance of considering possible neurological manifestations of SARS-CoV-2 infection and highlight seizure disorder as one of the possible presentations. In addition, we discuss the possible effects of clozapine on the electroclinical presentation by way of possible seizure induction as well as discuss the possible EEG changes and we highlight that this needs to be kept in mind especially during rapid titration., Competing Interests: Competing interests: None declared., (© BMJ Publishing Group Limited 2020. No commercial re-use. See rights and permissions. Published by BMJ.)
- Published
- 2020
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12. Ictal vomiting; A dominant hemisphere phenomenon as demonstrated by intracranial depth electrode seizure mapping.
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Sokolov E, Selway R, and Brunnhuber F
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- Adult, Brain Mapping instrumentation, Electroencephalography instrumentation, Humans, Male, Seizures complications, Seizures diagnosis, Vomiting diagnosis, Vomiting etiology, Brain Mapping methods, Cerebral Cortex physiopathology, Electrodes, Implanted, Electroencephalography methods, Seizures physiopathology, Vomiting physiopathology
- Published
- 2019
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13. Slower alpha rhythm associates with poorer seizure control in epilepsy.
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Abela E, Pawley AD, Tangwiriyasakul C, Yaakub SN, Chowdhury FA, Elwes RDC, Brunnhuber F, and Richardson MP
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- Adolescent, Adult, Electroencephalography methods, Epilepsy, Generalized physiopathology, Female, Frontal Lobe physiopathology, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Young Adult, Alpha Rhythm physiology, Epilepsy physiopathology, Image Processing, Computer-Assisted, Seizures physiopathology
- Abstract
Objective: Slowing and frontal spread of the alpha rhythm have been reported in multiple epilepsy syndromes. We investigated whether these phenomena are associated with seizure control., Methods: We prospectively acquired resting-state electroencephalogram (EEG) in 63 patients with focal and idiopathic generalized epilepsy (FE and IGE) and 39 age- and gender-matched healthy subjects (HS). Patients were divided into good and poor (≥4 seizures/12 months) seizure control groups based on self-reports and clinical records. We computed spectral power from 20-sec EEG segments during eyes-closed wakefulness, free of interictal abnormalities, and quantified power in high- and low-alpha bands. Analysis of covariance and post hoc t -tests were used to assess group differences in alpha-power shift across all EEG channels. Permutation-based statistics were used to assess the topography of this shift across the whole scalp., Results: Compared to HS, patients showed a statistically significant shift of spectral power from high- to low-alpha frequencies (effect size g = 0.78 [95% confidence interval 0.43, 1.20]). This alpha-power shift was driven by patients with poor seizure control in both FE and IGE ( g = 1.14, [0.65, 1.74]), and occurred over midline frontal and bilateral occipital regions. IGE exhibited less alpha power shift compared to FE over bilateral frontal regions ( g = -1.16 [-0.68, -1.74]). There was no interaction between syndrome and seizure control. Effects were independent of antiepileptic drug load, time of day, or subgroup definitions., Interpretation: Alpha slowing and anteriorization are a robust finding in patients with epilepsy and might represent a generic indicator of seizure liability., Competing Interests: None declared.
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- 2018
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14. Letter to the Editor: NMDA receptor autoimmunity in mania following HSV encephalitis.
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Blackman G, Moran N, Silber E, Symeon C, Brunnhuber F, Mazumder A, Jaffer F, and Pollak T
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- Adult, Anti-N-Methyl-D-Aspartate Receptor Encephalitis cerebrospinal fluid, Anti-N-Methyl-D-Aspartate Receptor Encephalitis virology, Bipolar Disorder virology, Electroencephalography, Encephalitis, Viral cerebrospinal fluid, Humans, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Male, Anti-N-Methyl-D-Aspartate Receptor Encephalitis etiology, Bipolar Disorder etiology, Brain physiopathology, Encephalitis, Viral complications, Herpesvirus 1, Human pathogenicity
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
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15. Home Video Telemetry vs inpatient telemetry: A comparative study looking at video quality.
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Biswas S, Luz R, and Brunnhuber F
- Abstract
Objective: To compare the quality of home video recording with inpatient telemetry (IPT) to evaluate our current Home Video Telemetry (HVT) practice., Method: To assess our HVT practice, a retrospective comparison of the video quality against IPT was conducted with the latter as the gold standard. A pilot study had been conducted in 2008 on 5 patients.Patients ( n = 28) were included in each group over a period of one year.The data was collected from referral spreadsheets, King's EPR and telemetry archive.Scoring of the events captured was by consensus using two scorers.The variables compared included: visibility of the body part of interest, visibility of eyes, time of event, illumination, contrast, sound quality and picture clarity when amplified to 200%.Statistical evaluation was carried out using Shapiro-Wilk and Chi-square tests. The P -value of ⩽0.05 was considered statistically significant., Results: Significant differences were demonstrated in lighting and contrast between the two groups (HVT performed better in both).Amplified picture quality was slightly better in the HVT group., Conclusion: Video quality of HVT is comparable to IPT, even surpassing IPT in certain aspects such as the level of illumination and contrast. Results were reconfirmed in a larger sample of patients with more variables., Significance: Despite the user and environmental variability in HVT, it looks promising and can be seriously considered as a preferable alternative for patients who may require investigation at locations remote from an EEG laboratory.
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- 2016
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16. Clinical outcome of generalized periodic epileptiform discharges on first EEG in patients with hypoxic encephalopathy postcardiac arrest.
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Ribeiro A, Singh R, and Brunnhuber F
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- Activities of Daily Living, Adult, Aged, Databases, Factual, Disability Evaluation, Epilepsy etiology, Female, Humans, Hypoxia, Brain complications, Hypoxia, Brain etiology, Male, Middle Aged, Myoclonus etiology, Prognosis, Status Epilepticus physiopathology, Survivors, Treatment Outcome, Electroencephalography, Epilepsy therapy, Heart Arrest complications, Hypoxia, Brain therapy
- Abstract
Introduction: The EEG, alongside clinical examination, imaging studies, and SSEPs, is used to determine the prognosis following hypoxic encephalopathy postcardiac arrest. Generalized periodic epileptiform discharges (GPEDs) are recognized as a "malignant" EEG pattern associated with very poor outcome with previous studies reporting no or few survivors. We looked at our database of cardiac arrest patients who subsequently developed GPEDs to determine clinical outcome and profile any survivors., Methodology: We identified all cardiac arrest patients treated at King's College Hospital between 2011-2014 who developed hypoxic encephalopathy associated with GPEDs, BiPLEDs (bilateral periodic lateralized epileptiform discharges), and periodic discharges on first EEG. We collected clinical data including age, gender, downtime, EEG reactivity, presence of seizures or myoclonus, and outcome. Survivors were defined as patients who were discharged from the hospital to home or a neurorehabilitation unit., Results: Thirty-six postcardiac arrest patients with hypoxic encephalopathy were identified, 24/36 with GPEDs, and 12/36 with BiPLEDs on first EEG. The mean age of patients was 62.8 ± 14.5 years old, with 27 males (75%) and 9 females (25%). Ten of thirty-six patients survived, which is slightly higher than previously reported. Statistical tests to compare clinical characteristics between survivors and nonsurvivors demonstrated no significant differences except for trend to significance for the presence of reactivity on first EEG (p = 0.0794). On discharge, one survivor had good functional outcome (and subsequently became independent), but all others were dependent for all ADLs (activities of daily living)., Conclusion: Generalized periodic epileptiform discharges carry a grave clinical prognosis following cardiac arrest. This study did identify a higher number of survivors compared to previous studies, but most were severely disabled at hospital discharge. Reactivity of the first EEG might predict better prognosis and merit further evaluation. This article is part of a Special Issue entitled "Status Epilepticus"., (Crown Copyright © 2015. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2015
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17. Development, evaluation and implementation of video-EEG telemetry at home.
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Brunnhuber F, Amin D, Nguyen Y, Goyal S, and Richardson MP
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- Delivery of Health Care, Electroencephalography economics, Electroencephalography methods, Feasibility Studies, Home Nursing, Humans, Patient Satisfaction, Telemetry methods, Electroencephalography instrumentation, Epilepsy physiopathology, Telemetry instrumentation
- Abstract
Purpose: To describe the development and implementation of video EEG telemetry (VT) in the patient's home (home video telemetry, HVT) in a single centre., Methods: HVT met the UK Medical Research Council definition of a complex intervention, and we used its guidance to evaluate the process of piloting, evaluating, developing and implementing this new clinical service. The first phase was a feasibility study, comparing inpatient VT (IVT) with HVT in a test-retest design (n=5), to assess data quality and yield of clinically relevant events. The second phase was a pre-implementation study (n=8), to examine acceptability and satisfaction as well as the costs of IVT and HVT. Subsequently, we implemented the service, and reviewed the outcomes of the first 34 patients., Results: The feasibility study found no difference in the quality of recording or clinical yield between IVT and HVT. The pre-implementation study showed excellent patient satisfaction. We also discuss the findings of the main stakeholder survey (consultants and technicians). Our economic modelling demonstrates a clear financial superiority of HVT over IVT., Conclusion: Our findings show that diagnostic HVT for seizure classification and polysomnographies can be carried out safely in the patients' home and poses no security risks for staff. HVT can be effectively integrated into an existing tertiary care service as a routine home or community-based procedure. We hope to encourage other clinical neurophysiology departments and epilepsy centres to take advantage of our experience and consider adopting and implementing HVT, with the aim of a nationwide coverage., (Copyright © 2014 British Epilepsy Association. Published by Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2014
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18. The dorsal hippocampal commissure: when functionality matters.
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Rosenzweig I, Beniczky S, Brunnhuber F, Alarcon G, and Valentin A
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- Electric Stimulation, Electroencephalography, Epilepsy, Temporal Lobe surgery, Female, Functional Laterality, Humans, Magnetic Resonance Imaging methods, Middle Aged, Epilepsy, Temporal Lobe pathology, Fornix, Brain physiopathology, Hippocampus physiopathology
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
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19. Paroxysmal dyskinesia with déjà vu aura.
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Rosenzweig I, Bhatia KP, Nashef L, and Brunnhuber F
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- Carbamazepine therapeutic use, Humans, Male, Young Adult, Anticonvulsants therapeutic use, Carbamazepine analogs & derivatives, Chorea drug therapy, Chorea physiopathology, Deja Vu psychology
- Published
- 2010
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20. Characteristics of scalp electrical fields associated with deep medial temporal epileptiform discharges.
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Nayak D, Valentín A, Alarcón G, García Seoane JJ, Brunnhuber F, Juler J, Polkey CE, and Binnie CD
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- Adolescent, Adult, Child, Electrodes, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Scalp physiology, Brain Mapping, Cortical Synchronization methods, Epilepsy physiopathology, Scalp innervation, Temporal Lobe physiopathology
- Abstract
Objective: To determine scalp characteristics of epileptiform discharges arising from medial temporal structures (MT)., Methods: Signal-to-noise ratio was increased by averaging simultaneous recordings from intracranial and scalp electrodes synchronised on discharges recorded by foramen ovale (FO) electrodes. The topography, amplitude and distribution of averaged scalp signals were analysed., Results: Four thousand three hundred and twenty-seven discharges from 20 patients were averaged into 77 patterns. Before averaging, only 9% of discharges were detectable on the scalp without the need of simultaneous FO recordings (SED). A further 72.3% of discharges fell into averaged patterns that could be detected on the scalp as small transients before or after averaging (STBA or STAA). In 18.7% of discharges, no scalp signal was seen after averaging. Whereas most SED patterns had largest amplitude on the scalp at anterior temporal electrodes, STBA and STAA patterns showed greater variability and more widespread scalp fields, suggesting a deeper source. Dipole source localisation modelled the majority of SED patterns as radial dipoles located just behind the eye. In contrast, dipoles corresponding to STBA or STAA patterns showed greater variability in location and orientation and tended to be located at MT., Conclusions: SED patterns seem to arise from widespread subtemporal and/or superficial neocortical activation, generating EEG fields that are distorted by the high electrical conductivity of anterior cranial foramina. In contrast, STBA and STAA patterns represent electrical fields from neuronal activity more restricted to MT, that reach the scalp highly attenuated by volume-conduction and less distorted by cranial foramina., Significance: Low amplitude scalp signals can be related to MT activity and must be taken into consideration for the diagnosis of temporal lobe epilepsy, pre-surgical assessment and for valid modelling of deep sources from the scalp EEG and magnetoencephalogram.
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
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