Clinical Neurophysiology of Infancy, Childhood, and Adolescence 2006
DOI: 10.1016/b978-0-7506-7251-1.50006-x
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Electroencephalography of the Newborn: Normal Features

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Cited by 23 publications
(35 citation statements)
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“…In our study most common type of neonatal seizure is subtle type 95 (63.33%) followed by generalized tonic 29 (19.33), multifocal clonic 15 (10%), focal tonic and focal clonic 4 (2.67% each) and myoclonic 3 (2%). Mizrahi and Kellaway, 10 Scher et al, 11 also found subtle type as most common type seizure which is comparable with our study. In our study perinatal asphyxia 80 (53.33%) was most common cause of neonatal seizure followed by metabolic causes 24 (16%), infections 15 (10%), intracranial hemorrhage in 7 (4.66%), meconium aspiration syndrome 5 (3.33%), bronchopneumonia 3 (2.00%), bilirubin encephalopathy and polycythemia each 2 (1.33%) while 12 (8%) cases had undetermined etiology.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 82%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…In our study most common type of neonatal seizure is subtle type 95 (63.33%) followed by generalized tonic 29 (19.33), multifocal clonic 15 (10%), focal tonic and focal clonic 4 (2.67% each) and myoclonic 3 (2%). Mizrahi and Kellaway, 10 Scher et al, 11 also found subtle type as most common type seizure which is comparable with our study. In our study perinatal asphyxia 80 (53.33%) was most common cause of neonatal seizure followed by metabolic causes 24 (16%), infections 15 (10%), intracranial hemorrhage in 7 (4.66%), meconium aspiration syndrome 5 (3.33%), bronchopneumonia 3 (2.00%), bilirubin encephalopathy and polycythemia each 2 (1.33%) while 12 (8%) cases had undetermined etiology.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 82%
“…[1][2][3] Thus, determination of etiology is critical, because it gives the opportunity to treat and to make a meaningful statement about the prognosis. [3][4][5] Nowadays, NS is defined by video -electroencephalographic monitoring, by clinical observation associated to ictal or interictal electroencephalogram (EEG), by electrographic discharge without associated clinical manifestation or by neonatal polysomnography 4,[6][7][8][9][10][11][12] . However, in clinical practice at the pediatric or neonatal intensive care units (ICU), in developing countries where synchronized video-EEG monitoring is practically nonexistent, clinical observation becomes the key to the diagnosis 3 .…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Its main feature at the EEG level consists of quasiperiodical bursts of bilateral high-voltage slow waves (mainly Ͻ15 Hz) separated by low-voltage or absent activity lasting from a few seconds to minutes (Chatrian, 1990). BS is associated with coma (Brenner, 1985) and generally develops during hypoxia (Silverman, 1975;Brenner, 1985), cardiac arrest (Zaret, 1985;Young, 2000), drug-related intoxications (Brenner, 1985;Weissenborn et al, 1991;Ostermann et al, 2000;De Rubeis and Young, 2001), childhood encephalopathies (Niedermeyer et al, 1999;Scher, 1999), hypothermia (Pagni and Courjon, 1964;Michenfelder and Milde, 1991;Nakashima et al, 1995), etc.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The second problem is that the EEG acquired in intensive care environments is particularly prone to artefact and the reliable identification and removal of artefacts is essential. Finally, the normal EEG pattern of infants between 26 and 30 wk gestation is markedly discontinuous and consists of long periods of quiescence, interspersed with bursts of electrical activity of high voltage and of mixed frequency (1,6). It is therefore important that any automatic approach to EEG analysis be able to estimate the degree of discontinuity in the trace.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%