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Παρασκευή 10 Νοεμβρίου 2017

Beamforming applied to surface EEG improves ripple visibility

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Publication date: Available online 9 November 2017
Source:Clinical Neurophysiology
Author(s): Nicole van Klink, Arjen Mol, Cyrille Ferrier, Arjan Hillebrand, Geertjan Huiskamp, Maeike Zijlmans
ObjectiveSurface EEG can show epileptiform ripples in people with focal epilepsy, but identification is impeded by the low signal-to-noise ratio of the electrode recordings. We used beamformer-based virtual electrodes to improve ripple identification.MethodsWe analyzed ten minutes of interictal EEG of nine patients with refractory focal epilepsy. EEGs with more than 60 channels and 20 spikes were included. We computed ∼79 virtual electrodes using a scalar beamformer and marked ripples (80-250Hz) co-occurring with spikes in physical and virtual electrodes. Ripple numbers in physical and virtual electrodes were compared, and sensitivity and specificity of ripples for the region of interest (ROI; based on clinical information) were determined.ResultsFive patients had ripples in the physical electrodes and eight in the virtual electrodes, with more ripples in virtual than in physical electrodes (101 vs. 57, p=0.007). Ripples in virtual electrodes predicted the ROI better than physical electrodes (AUC 0.65 vs. 0.56, p=0.03).ConclusionsBeamforming increased ripple visibility in surface EEG. Virtual ripples predicted the ROI better than physical ripples, although sensitivity was still poor.SignificanceBeamforming can facilitate ripple identification in EEG. Ripple localization needs to be improved to enable its use for presurgical evaluation in people with epilepsy.



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