High-Density EEG in Current Clinical Practice and Opportunities for the Future

Summary: High-density EEG (HD-EEG) recordings use a higher spatial sampling of scalp electrodes than a standard 10-20 low-density EEG montage. Although several studies have demonstrated improved localization of the epileptogenic cortex using HD-EEG, widespread implementation is impeded by cost, setup and interpretation time, and lack of specific or sufficient procedural billing codes. Despite these barriers, HD-EEG has been in use at several institutions for years. These centers have noted utility in a variety of clinical scenarios where increased spatial resolution from HD-EEG has been required, justifying the extra time and cost. We share select scenarios from several centers, using different recording techniques and software, where HD-EEG provided information above and beyond the standard low-density EEG. We include seven cases where HD-EEG contributed directly to current clinical care of epilepsy patients and highlight two novel techniques which suggest potential opportunities to improve future clinical care. Cases illustrate how HD-EEG allows clinicians to: case 1—lateralize falsely generalized interictal epileptiform discharges; case 2—improve localization of falsely generalized epileptic spasms; cases 3 and 4—improve localization of interictal epileptiform discharges in anatomic regions below the circumferential limit of standard low-density EEG coverage; case 5—improve noninvasive localization of the seizure onset zone in lesional epilepsy; cases 6 and 7â€...
Source: Journal of Clinical Neurophysiology - Category: Neurology Tags: Special Article Source Type: research