Publication | Open Access
The Premenstrual Syndrome
310
Citations
9
References
1953
Year
Hormonal ContraceptiveNeuropsychologyEeg RecordingsReproductive HealthDiagnosisGynecologyNeurophysiological BiomarkersMenstrual CycleElectroencephalographyPsychologySocial SciencesCognitive ElectrophysiologyNeurologySexual And Reproductive HealthInfertilityPreterm LaborMaternal HealthNeurological MonitoringNeuroimagingIctal DischargesNeurological AssessmentBrain-computer InterfaceCognitive DynamicsNeurophysiologyEeg Signal ProcessingHuman NeuroscienceBrain ElectrophysiologyNeurosciencePremenstrual SyndromeMedicineTypical PitfallsWomen's Health
<h3>Abstract</h3> <h3>Objective</h3> Electroencephalography (EEG) interpretations through visual (by human raters) and automated (by computer technology) analysis are still not reliable for the diagnosis of non-convulsive status epilepticus (NCSE). This study aimed to identify typical pitfalls in the EEG analysis and make suggestions as to how those pitfalls might be avoided. <h3>Methods</h3> We analyzed the EEG recordings of individuals who had clinically confirmed or suspected NCSE. Epileptiform EEG activity during seizures (ictal discharges) were visually analyzed by two independent raters. We investigated whether unreliable EEG visual interpretations quantified by low inter-rater agreement can be predicted by the characteristics of ictal discharges and individuals’ clinical data. In addition, the EEG recordings were automatically analyzed by in-house algorithms. To further explore the causes of unreliable EEG interpretations, two epileptologists analyzed EEG patterns most likely misinterpreted as ictal discharges based on the differences between the EEG interpretations through the visual and automated analysis. <h3>Results</h3> Short ictal discharges with a gradual onset (developing over 3 seconds in length) were liable to be misinterpreted. An extra 2 minutes of ictal discharges contributed to an increase in the kappa statistics of > 0.1. Other problems were the misinterpretation of abnormal background activity (slow wave activities, other abnormal brain activity, and the ictal-like movement artifacts), continuous interictal discharges, and continuous short ictal discharges. <h3>Conclusion</h3> A longer duration criterion for NCSE-EEGs than 10 seconds that commonly used in NCSE working criteria is needed. Using knowledge of historical EEGs, individualized algorithms, and context-dependent alarm thresholds may also avoid the pitfalls.
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