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Related Experiment Videos

Human bedside evaluation versus automatic responsiveness testing in epilepsy (ARTiE).

George Touloumes1, Elliot Morse1, William C Chen1

  • 1Department of Neurology, Yale University School of Medicine, New Haven, Connecticut, U.S.A.

Epilepsia
|December 15, 2015
PubMed
Summary

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This summary is machine-generated.

Behavioral testing during epileptic seizures is inconsistent. A new system, Automatic Responsiveness Testing in Epilepsy (ARTiE), uses computerized seizure detection to reliably initiate behavioral tasks, aiming to improve epilepsy care.

Area of Science:

  • Neurology
  • Clinical Neurophysiology
  • Epilepsy Research

Background:

  • Accurate assessment of behavioral impairment during epileptic seizures is crucial for diagnosis, driving recommendations, and presurgical planning.
  • Current methods for behavioral testing during inpatient video-electroencephalography (EEG) monitoring are often inconsistent and incomplete.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To evaluate the quality of current behavioral testing practices during inpatient video-EEG monitoring.
  • To introduce a novel technological solution, Automatic Responsiveness Testing in Epilepsy (ARTiE), to enhance behavioral evaluation during seizures.

Main Methods:

  • Retrospective review of video-EEG data from 152 seizures in 33 patients undergoing inpatient monitoring.
  • Development and initial technical testing of ARTiE, a system for automated, video-recorded behavioral tasks triggered by computerized seizure detection.
Keywords:
Behavioral testingConsciousnessDrivingEpilepsySeizure detection

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Main Results:

  • Behavioral testing occurred in only 50% of seizures ictally and 73% postictally.
  • Testing methods were inconsistent and often performed by nonmedical personnel.
  • ARTiE demonstrated reliable initiation by automatic seizure detection in initial technical evaluations.

Conclusions:

  • Current behavioral testing during epilepsy monitoring has significant limitations.
  • ARTiE shows promise as a tool to provide comprehensive and reliable behavioral assessments during seizures.
  • Further clinical testing is needed to validate ARTiE's efficacy in improving patient care.