Abstract

Electroencephalography (EEG) is used for studying functional disorders of the brain. We provide an overview of the areas where EEG is most strongly indicated and the clinical benefit of the examination. This article is based on articles from personal literature archives and literature searches in PubMed, textbook on methods in clinical neurophysiology, the work of one of the authors on a new European standard for EEG and the authors' clinical experience. EEG is primarily indicated for assessing suspected epileptic seizures and encephalopathies. Standard EEG, sleep-deprived EEG and long-term EEG examinations are used in diagnosing epilepsy. EEG will identify epileptiform activity in about 90% of patients with epilepsy. Epileptiform EEG activity in these patients will provide support for the diagnosis of epilepsy, while the absence of such activity will not exclude the diagnosis. EEG is also important for classifying the type of epileptic syndrome. In cases of encephalopathy, pathology will take the form of an increase in slow activity on the EEG and will support the diagnosis, but as a rule the EEG finding is non-specific. Findings in some cases may point to the underlying aetiology. Electroencephalograms must be interpreted by an experienced clinical neurophysiologist or neurologist with specialist expertise in EEG interpretation, and must always be evaluated in the light of the clinical picture.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call