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Multimodal wearable EEG, EMG and accelerometry measurements improve the accuracy of tonic-clonic seizure detection.

Authors :
Zhang J
Swinnen L
Chatzichristos C
Broux V
Proost R
Jansen K
Mahler B
Zabler N
Epitashvilli N
Dümpelmann M
Schulze-Bonhage A
Schriewer E
Ermis U
Wolking S
Linke F
Weber Y
Symmonds M
Sen A
Biondi A
Richardson MP
I AS
Silva AI
Sales F
Vértes G
Paesschen WV
Vos M
Source :
Physiological measurement [Physiol Meas] 2024 Jun 07; Vol. 45 (6). Date of Electronic Publication: 2024 Jun 07.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

Objective . This paper aims to investigate the possibility of detecting tonic-clonic seizures (TCSs) with behind-the-ear, two-channel wearable electroencephalography (EEG), and to evaluate its added value to non-EEG modalities in TCS detection. Methods . We included 27 participants with a total of 44 TCSs from the European multicenter study SeizeIT2. The wearable Sensor Dot (Byteflies) was used to measure behind-the-ear EEG, electromyography (EMG), electrocardiography, accelerometry (ACC) and gyroscope. We evaluated automatic unimodal detection of TCSs, using sensitivity, precision, false positive rate (FPR) and F1-score. Subsequently, we fused the different modalities and again assessed performance. Algorithm-labeled segments were then provided to two experts, who annotated true positive TCSs, and discarded false positives. Results . Wearable EEG outperformed the other single modalities with a sensitivity of 100% and a FPR of 10.3/24 h. The combination of wearable EEG and EMG proved most clinically useful, delivering a sensitivity of 97.7%, an FPR of 0.4/24 h, a precision of 43%, and an F1-score of 59.7%. The highest overall performance was achieved through the fusion of wearable EEG, EMG, and ACC, yielding a sensitivity of 90.9%, an FPR of 0.1/24 h, a precision of 75.5%, and an F1-score of 82.5%. Conclusions . In TCS detection with a wearable device, combining EEG with EMG, ACC or both resulted in a remarkable reduction of FPR, while retaining a high sensitivity. Significance . Adding wearable EEG could further improve TCS detection, relative to extracerebral-based systems.<br /> (© 2024 Institute of Physics and Engineering in Medicine.)

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1361-6579
Volume :
45
Issue :
6
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Physiological measurement
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
38772401
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1088/1361-6579/ad4e94