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The diagnostic value of the short sleep EEG and other provocative methods following sleep deprivation

✍ Scribed by Jürgen R. Schwarz; Wolfgang H. Zangemeister


Book ID
104717512
Publisher
Springer
Year
1978
Tongue
English
Weight
434 KB
Volume
218
Category
Article
ISSN
0340-5354

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✦ Synopsis


One hundred and eighty-five EEGs recorded after deprivation of sleep for 24 h were evaluated. Valuable diagnostic information was found in 59% of the EEG recordings; 24% of the EEGs contained seizure activity. The duration of the stages of sleep and the frequency of seizure activity, paroxysmal sharp wave groups and localizing findings were analyzed. The sleep stages A to C (based on the Loomis scale) were reached for about equal duration by an EEG recording of 30--40 min; sleep stage D was reached only shortly and stage E was not observed. Pathological EEG findings appeared for the most part in the sleep stages A and B. Localized findings were pronounced in stage C. No significant differences pertaining to the occurrence and form of EEG patterns were found between patient groups with primary generalized seizures, psychomotor seizures or those with unclarified disturbances of consciousness. The combination of the short sleep EEG following 24 h of sleep deprivation with subsequent use of the additional provocative methods of hyperventilation, photostimulation and hydration, yielded, in all, new information in 50% of the patients. Each of these additional methods contributed nearly equally to this information.


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