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The clinical utility of ambulatory cassette EEG
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1985
Year
NeuropsychologyRoutine EegDiagnosisNeurophysiological BiomarkersElectroencephalographySocial SciencesAmbulatory Cassette EegAmbulatory Eeg MonitoringCognitive ElectrophysiologyNeurologyNeuropathologyPsychiatryNeuroimagingNeurostimulationNeurophysiologyEpilepsy CenterEeg Signal ProcessingPatient SafetyBrain ElectrophysiologyCentral Nervous SystemBraincomputer InterfaceMedicine
We obtained ambulatory EEG monitoring (A/EEG) before intensive monitoring in 33 patients newly referred to an epilepsy center. The A/EEG yield of evidence to support a diagnosis of epilepsy was 83% of that of intensive monitoring and 2.5 times that of routine EEG. Accuracy of A/EEG analysis was confirmed by two blind reviews for each tape, with only three misreadings among 99 interpretations rendered. Among 25 patients with specifically diagnostic referrals, A/EEG served the purpose of admission as well as intensive monitoring in 60%. Episodes not accompanied by A/EEG change required behavioral observation for correct identification.