Posted By: NITRC ADMIN - Jul 16, 2016
Tool/Resource: Journals
 

Marker-based ballistocardiographic artifact correction improves spike identification in EEG-fMRI of focal epilepsy patients.

Clin Neurophysiol. 2016 Jun 8;127(8):2802-2811

Authors: Körbl K, Jacobs J, Herbst M, Zaitsev M, Schulze-Bonhage A, Hennig J, LeVan P

Abstract
OBJECTIVES: Ballistocardiographic (BCG) artifacts resemble interictal epileptic discharges (IEDs) and can lead to incorrect IED identification in EEG-fMRI. This study investigates IEDs marked in EEGs corrected using information from a moiré phase tracking (MPT) marker.
METHODS: EEG-fMRI from 18 patients was processed with conventional methods for BCG removal, while 9 patients used a MPT marker. IEDs were marked first without ECG information. In a second review, suspicious IEDs synchronous with the BCG were discarded. After each review, an event-related fMRI analysis was performed on the marked IEDs.
RESULTS: No difference was found in the proportion of suspicious IEDs in the 2 patient groups. However, the distribution of IED timings was significantly related to the cardiac cycle in 11 of 18 patients recorded without MPT marker, but only 2 of 9 patients with marker. In patients recorded without marker, failing to discard suspicious IEDs led to more inaccurate fMRI maps and more distant activations.
CONCLUSIONS: BCG artifact correction based on MPT recordings allowed a more straightforward identification of IEDs that did not require ECG information in the large majority of patients.
SIGNIFICANCE: Marker-based ballistocardiographic artifact correction greatly facilitates the study of the generators of interictal discharges with EEG-fMRI.

PMID: 27417056 [PubMed - as supplied by publisher]



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