Publication | Closed Access
Complexity of Focal Spikes Suggests Relative Epileptogenicity
13
Citations
22
References
1995
Year
NeuropsychologyNeurophysiological BiomarkersBrain LesionOptic NerveSocial SciencesNeurodynamicsGeneralized Seizure TendencyFocal SpikesNeurologyNeuropathologyNeuropsychological FunctioningLocal PathologyPsychiatryNeuroimagingVisual PathwayNeurophysiologyNeuroanatomyComputational NeuroscienceNeuroscienceCentral Nervous SystemMedicine
The EEGs of 39 children with focal or multifocal spikes were subjected to singular value decomposition (SVD) as provided by a commercial software program. We noted that in children with spikes but no clinical seizures the variance accounted for by the first component averaged 91.9%, whereas in children with seizures it was 68.0% (p < .001). The first component accounted for 85.4% in children with single spike foci, for 71.5% in those with multifocal spikes, and for 61.4% (p < 0.002) in those with both focal spikes and generalized spike-wave complexes. Spikes in the frontal and frontopolar areas were the most complex, suggesting that at least in children they tend to be the partial expression of a generalized seizure tendency rather than a result of strictly local pathology.
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