eeg artifacts - acns

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EEG Artifacts

Katie Bullinger, MD/PhDAssistant ProfessorEmory University

Conflicts of InterestI have no financial disclosures or conflicts of interest related to the material contained within this talk.

Research funding: Neuropace, Inc., CDC, NIH for unrelated work.

Outline

• What is an artifact?

• Approach to artifacts

• Physiologic artifacts

• Non-physiologic artifacts

• Reducing artifacts

• Conclusions

Artifacts

• Electrical potentials stemming from extracerebral sources

• Often contaminate the recording

• Rarely helpful

• Can result in misinterpretation of the EEG

Ictalmimics

• Tremor• Tapping• Focal facial movements• Electrode artifacts

McKay and Tatum (2019)

• Eye flutter• Tongue movements• Neurostimulators• Head jerks• Ventilator• Psychogenic nonepileptic spells

Generalized

Focal

Approach to Artifacts

Appearance Morphology, polarity, amplitude, duration, frequency, evolution, disruption of the background

Distribution Single electrode, beyond scalp

Setting Ambulatory, ICU, EMU, OR

State Wakefulness, drowsiness, sleep, comatose

Video Recording Tremor, patting, tooth brushing, CPR

Clues to Artifact

• A restricted to only 1 channel

• Noncontiguous head regions

• Affects non-scalp electrodes

• Complex waveforms

• Atypical generalized waveforms

• Precise periodicity and uniformity

• Very fast (>70 Hz) or very slow (<1Hz)

Tatum (2013)

EEG Artifacts

Physiologic Non-physiologic

Extrinsic

Equipment Environmental

Intrinsic (Implanted

devices)

PhysiologicArtifacts

• Ocular

• Cardiac

• Myogenic

• Glossokinetic

• Respiratory

• Sweat

• Movement

• Bone (breach)

Eye movements- blink

Asymmetric eye movements

Lateral eye movements

Eye movements- lateral rectus spikes

Eye movements- ocular flutter

Cardiac- EKG

Cardiac- pulse

Myogenic

Patient relaxes

Chewing

Asymmetric chewing

Glossokinetic

Respiratory

Sweat

Salt bridge

Movement

Tremor

Toothbrushing

Psychogenic nonepileptic spell

Shaking starts Shaking stops

Patting

Sternal rub

CPR

Breach

Non-physiologicArtifacts

• Electrode pop• Electrode disconnection• 60 cycle• Drips• Ventilator• Cell phone• Neurostimulators

Electrode pop

Electrode disconnection

60-cycle

Notch on

Notch off

IV Drip

Ventilator/tubing

Cell phone

Neurostimulation devices

RNSDBS

Artifact Reduction

• Manual Rejection

• Automated Artifact Rejection/Subtraction

• Band Pass Filtration

Automated artifact subtraction

Bandpass filtration

**It can mask focal or generalized slowing

Bandpass filtration

Bandpass filtration

**Filtering can lead to erroneous interpretation of myogenic artifact as cerebral activity

Preferential to rejection/subtraction/filtering, find and eliminate source of artifact when possible.

Conclusions

• EEG artifacts are commonly encountered

• Many artifacts can be easily identified, but others maybe difficult to identify and may mimic brain activity including ictal or interictal findings.

• Video can often be helpful in identifying the source

• Identifying and interpreting EEG artifact is essential to proper EEG interpretation

• Artifact reducing techniques can be helpful, but should not replace a solid understanding of neurophysiologic principles

• When possible, attempts should be made to rectify source.

Questions?

References/additional reading• Ebersole J. Current Practice of Clinical Electroencephalography (4th ed.). Philadelphia, PA: Wolters

Kluwer Health.

• Gaspard N, Hirsch L. Pitfalls in Ictal EEG Interpretation. Neurology. 2013;80:S26-S42. • Mathias, Sally V.; Bensalem-Owen, Meriem. Artifacts That Can Be Misinterpreted as Interictal

Discharges, Journal of Clinical Neurophysiology: July 2019 - Volume 36 - Issue 4 - p 264-274• McKay JH, Tatum WO. Artifact Mimicking Ictal Epileptiform Activity in EEG. J ClinNeurophysiol.

2019 Jul;36(4):275-288.

• Tatum WO, Dworetzky BA, Schomer DL. Artifact and recording concepts in EEG. J Clin Neurophysiol. 2011 Jun;28(3):252-63.

• Tatum et al. Handbook of EEG interpretation (2nd Edition). New York, NY: Demos Medical• Tatum WO. Artifact-related epilepsy. Neurology. 2013 Jan 1;80(1 Suppl 1):S12-25.

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