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Measuring brain activity cycling (BAC) in long term EEG monitoring of preterm babies
22
Citations
28
References
2014
Year
NeuropsychologyDevelopmental Cognitive NeuroscienceNeurophysiological BiomarkersElectroencephalographySocial SciencesVigilance StatesCognitive ElectrophysiologyNeurologyPreterm BabiesCognitive NeuroscienceSleep Wake CyclingSleepBrain Activity CyclingNeuropsychological FunctioningBrain StructurePreterm LaborNeuroimagingRehabilitationEarly Preterm InfantsSleep DisorderNeurophysiologyEeg Signal ProcessingPediatricsNeuroscienceCentral Nervous SystemMedicinePrenatal Development
Measuring fluctuation of vigilance states in early preterm infants undergoing long term intensive care holds promise for monitoring their neurological well-being. There is currently, however, neither objective nor quantitative methods available for this purpose in a research or clinical environment. The aim of this proof-of-concept study was, therefore, to develop quantitative measures of the fluctuation in vigilance states or brain activity cycling (BAC) in early preterm infants. The proposed measures of BAC were summary statistics computed on a frequency domain representation of the proportional duration of spontaneous activity transients (SAT%) calculated from electroencephalograph (EEG) recordings. Eighteen combinations of three statistics and six frequency domain representations were compared to a visual interpretation of cycling in the SAT% signal. Three high performing measures (band energy/periodogram: R = 0.809, relative band energy/nonstationary frequency marginal: R = 0.711, g-statistic/nonstationary frequency marginal: R = 0.638) were then compared to a grading of sleep wake cycling based on the visual interpretation of the amplitude-integrated EEG trend. These measures of BAC are conceptually straightforward, correlate well with the visual scores of BAC and sleep wake cycling, are robust enough to cope with the technically compromised monitoring data available in intensive care units, and are recommended for further validation in prospective studies.
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