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NEUROLOGY 1983;33:8
© 1983 American Academy of Neurology

An evaluation of ambulatory, cassette EEG monitoring

11. Detection of interictal abnormalities John S. Ebersole and Robert F. Leroy

Epilepsy Center, West Haven V. A. Medical Center, West Haven, CT, and the Department of Neurology, Yale University School of Medicine, New Haven, CT.

Although they are clearly useful for generalized ictal events, the ability of ambulatory, cassette EEG systems to detect interictal abnormalities routinely remains in question. The EEGs of 25 patients have been simultaneously monitored by cable telemetry and Oxford Medilog recorder, using a three-channel montage. Output from the cassette recorder amplifiers was of high fidelity compared to cable telemetry, and EEG reproduction from tape suffered only minimal signal degradation. Ambulatory EEG detection rate for interictal abnormalities averaged 85% and was commensurate with the montage design study. Perceptual demand during video scanning, including the recognition of normal transients and artifacts, was addressed as an important limiting factor. Ambulatory EEG monitoring by cassette recorder appears to be a useful intermediate-level screening technique for epileptiform abnormalities, both ictal and interictal.

Address correspondence and reprint requests to Dr. Ebersole, Department of Neurology, Yale University School of Medicine. New Haven, CT 06620.

Presented at the thirty-fifth annual meeting of the American Electroencephalographic Society, June 1981. This work was supported by the Epilepsy Foundation of America.

Accepted for publication June 4, 1982.




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