脑电图时的笔记本伪影

N. Sethi, N. Schaul, D. Kolesnik, D. Labar, P. Sethi
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CORRESPONDENCE TO NK Sethi, MD Department of Neurology Comprehensive Epilepsy Center NYP-Weill Cornell Medical Center 525 East, 68 Street New York, NY 10021(U.S.A.) E-mail: sethinitinmd@hotmail.com Laptop artifact during electroencephalography 2 of 3 References 1. Sethi NK, Torgovnick J, Sethi PK. Chest percussion artifact. Clin Neurophysiol. 2007; 118 (2): 475-6. 2. Sethi PK, Sethi NK, Torgovnick J. Mobile phone artifact. Clin Neurophysiol. 2006; 117(8): 1876-8. Laptop artifact during electroencephalography 3 of 3 Author Information N.K. Sethi Department of Neurology, Comprehensive Epilepsy Center, NYP-Weill Cornell Medical Center N. Schaul Department of Neurology, Comprehensive Epilepsy Center, New York Hospital D. Kolesnik Department of Neurology, Comprehensive Epilepsy Center, New York Hospital D. Labar Department of Neurology, Comprehensive Epilepsy Center, NYP-Weill Cornell Medical Center P.K. 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引用次数: 1

摘要

伪影是记录在脑电图(EEG)上的非脑源信号,可分为生理性和非生理性伪影。生理伪影是由患者自身产生的,包括心脏、舌动、肌肉、眼动、呼吸和脉搏等。患者周围环境产生的许多非生理性伪影会污染脑电图记录。常见的非生理性伪影包括由监测装置、输液泵、吸引装置和胸部物理治疗产生的伪影1。最近,像手机这样的电子设备产生的人工制品也有报道。在住院患者的视频脑电图记录中,在所有导联中都可以看到有节奏的高度清晰轮廓的14- 16hz波形(图1,2)。图1:脑电图记录显示,在所有导联中,每秒钟有14-16个周期的节律性高轮廓波形。图2:脑电图记录显示每秒14-16个周期的节律性高轮廓波形。每当患者触摸笔记本电脑时,就会出现这种现象。在观看视频图像时,每当患者触摸她面前的笔记本电脑时,就会出现这种明显的轮廓放电。我们试图将笔记本电脑交流适配器与脑电图头盒的电线交叉或分开,但无法分离出究竟是什么产生了这些波形。该患者使用无线PC卡访问互联网。识别像这样的非生理性伪影对于避免对脑电图的误解和错误的治疗决定是很重要的。它还强调,由于各种射频能量发射器的干扰,医疗设备可能无法正常运行。NK Sethi医学博士神经内科综合癫痫中心NYP-Weill Cornell医疗中心525 East, 68 Street New York, NY 10021(美国)电子邮件:sethinitinmd@hotmail.com脑电图期间的笔记本电脑伪影2 / 3参考文献1。Sethi NK, Torgovnick J, Sethi PK。胸部敲击神器。临床神经生理学杂志2007;118(2): 476 - 476。2. Sethi PK, Sethi NK, Torgovnick J.手机制品。临床神经生理学杂志2006;117(8): 1876 - 8。脑电图中的笔记本电脑图像3 / 3作者信息N.K. Sethi神经内科,综合癫痫中心,nypp - weill Cornell医学中心N. Schaul神经内科,综合癫痫中心,纽约医院D. Kolesnik神经内科,综合癫痫中心,纽约医院D. Labar神经内科,综合癫痫中心,nypp - weill Cornell医学中心P.K. Sethi神经内科,Sir Ganga Ram医院
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Laptop artifact during electroencephalography
Artifacts are signals recorded on the electroencephalogram (EEG) that are not cerebral in origin and can be divided into physiological and non-physiological artifacts. Physiological artifacts are generated from the patient itself and include cardiac, glossokinetic, muscle, eye movement, respiratory and pulse artifact among many others. Numerous nonphysiological artifacts generated from the immediate patient surroundings can contaminate EEG recordings. Common non-physiological artifacts include those generated by monitoring devices, infusion pumps, suctioning devices and chest physiotherapy 1. Lately artifacts generated by electronic devices like mobile phones have been reported 2. During inpatient video EEG recording of a patient, rhythmic highly sharply contoured 14-16 Hz waveforms were visualized in all the leads (Fig 1,2). Figure 1 Figure 1: EEG record showing onset of 14-16 cycles per second rhythmic highly sharply contoured waveforms in all leads. Figure 2 Figure 2: EEG record showing 14-16 cycles per second rhythmic highly sharply contoured waveforms. This artifact occurred whenever the patient touched the laptop pad. Upon viewing the video images, this sharply contoured discharge was noted to occur whenever the patient touched the laptop pad in front of her. We tried to cross and uncross the wire of the laptop AC adaptor with the EEG head box but were unable to isolate what exactly generated these waveforms. The patient was using a wireless PC card to access the Internet. Recognition of non-physiological artifacts like these is important to avoid misinterpretation of the EEG and erroneous treatment decisions. It also highlights the point that medical devices may fail to operate correctly due to interference from various emitters of radiofrequency energy. CORRESPONDENCE TO NK Sethi, MD Department of Neurology Comprehensive Epilepsy Center NYP-Weill Cornell Medical Center 525 East, 68 Street New York, NY 10021(U.S.A.) E-mail: sethinitinmd@hotmail.com Laptop artifact during electroencephalography 2 of 3 References 1. Sethi NK, Torgovnick J, Sethi PK. Chest percussion artifact. Clin Neurophysiol. 2007; 118 (2): 475-6. 2. Sethi PK, Sethi NK, Torgovnick J. Mobile phone artifact. Clin Neurophysiol. 2006; 117(8): 1876-8. Laptop artifact during electroencephalography 3 of 3 Author Information N.K. Sethi Department of Neurology, Comprehensive Epilepsy Center, NYP-Weill Cornell Medical Center N. Schaul Department of Neurology, Comprehensive Epilepsy Center, New York Hospital D. Kolesnik Department of Neurology, Comprehensive Epilepsy Center, New York Hospital D. Labar Department of Neurology, Comprehensive Epilepsy Center, NYP-Weill Cornell Medical Center P.K. Sethi Department of Neurology, Sir Ganga Ram Hospital
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