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Simultaneous recording of EEG and electromyographic polygraphy increases the diagnostic yield of video-EEG monitoring

Version 2 2024-06-05, 08:17
Version 1 2020-05-01, 09:21
journal contribution
posted on 2024-06-05, 08:17 authored by Aron HillAron Hill, BA Briggs, U Seneviratne
PURPOSE:: To investigate the usefulness of adjunctive electromyographic (EMG) polygraphy in the diagnosis of clinical events captured during long-term video-EEG monitoring. METHODS:: A total of 40 patients (21 women, 19 men) aged between 19 and 72 years (mean 43) investigated using video-EEG monitoring were studied. Electromyographic activity was simultaneously recorded with EEG in four patients selected on clinical grounds. In these patients, surface EMG electrodes were placed over muscles suspected to be activated during a typical clinical event. RESULTS:: Of the 40 patients investigated, 24 (60%) were given a diagnosis, whereas 16 (40%) remained undiagnosed. All four patients receiving adjunctive EMG polygraphy obtained a diagnosis, with three of these diagnoses being exclusively reliant on the EMG recordings. Specifically, one patient was diagnosed with propriospinal myoclonus, another patient was diagnosed with facio-mandibular myoclonus, and a third patient was found to have bruxism and periodic leg movements of sleep. CONCLUSIONS:: The information obtained from surface EMG recordings aided the diagnosis of clinical events captured during video-EEG monitoring in 7.5% of the total cohort. This study suggests that EEG-EMG polygraphy may be used as a technique of improving the diagnostic yield of video-EEG monitoring in selected cases. Copyright © 2014 by the American Clinical Neurophysiology Society.

History

Journal

Journal of clinical neurophysiology

Volume

31

Pagination

203-207

Location

Philadelphia, Pa.

ISSN

0736-0258

eISSN

1537-1603

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Issue

3

Publisher

Wolters Kluwer

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