Publication date: Available online 24 September 2018
Source: Clinical Neurophysiology
Author(s): Amir G. Baroumand, Pieter van Mierlo, Gregor Strobbe, Lars H. Pinborg, Martin Fabricius, Guido Rubboli, Anne-Mette Leffers, Peter Uldall, Bo Jespersen, Jannick Brennum, Otto Mølby Henriksen, Sándor Beniczky
Abstract
Objective
To evaluate the accuracy of automated EEG source imaging (ESI) in localizing epileptogenic zone.
Methods
Long-term EEG, recorded with the standard 25-electrode array of the IFCN, from 41 consecutive patients with focal epilepsy who underwent resective surgery, were analyzed blinded to the surgical outcome. The automated analysis comprised spike-detection, clustering and source imaging at the half-rising time and at the peak of each spike-cluster, using individual head-models with six tissue-layers and a distributed source model (sLORETA). The fully automated approach presented ESI of the cluster with the highest number of spikes, at the half-rising time. In addition, a physician involved in the presurgical evaluation of the patients, evaluated the automated ESI results (up to four clusters per patient) in clinical context and selected the dominant cluster and the analysis time-point (semi-automated approach). The reference standard was location of the resected area and outcome one year after operation.
Results
Accuracy was 61% (95% CI: 45-76%) for the fully automated approach and 78% (95% CI: 62-89%) for the semi-automated approach.
Conclusion
Automated ESI has an accuracy similar to previously reported neuroimaging methods.
Significance
Automated ESI will contribute to increased utilization of source imaging in the presurgical evaluation of patients with epilepsy.
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