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Abstract Details

Scalp Fast Ripples Are Detectable in a Large Pediatric Cohort with an Age-dependent Distribution
Epilepsy/Clinical Neurophysiology (EEG)
P8 - Poster Session 8 (11:45 AM-12:45 PM)
10-004
To investigate the role of age in the presence of high frequency oscillations (HFOs) on scalp electroencephalograms (EEGs) in a large pediatric cohort suspected or diagnosed with epilepsy. 

 

HFOs have been widely reported in invasive recordings as epileptogenic biomarkers. Whether they can be reliably detected on non-invasive scalp EEGs has been the focus of recent interest. Whereas spontaneously-occurring ripples (100-250 Hz) can be associated with either physiological or pathological activity, spontaneously-occurring fast ripples (FRs; 250-500 Hz) are pathological and can therefore serve as an important non-invasive epileptogenic biomarker. Whether the faster FR can be visually and reliably detected, and whether FR can be equally detected across age groups is not clear.
For patients admitted to our institution for whom a video-EEG was obtained for clinical diagnosis and management, all video-EEGs recorded at 2048 Hz sampling rate with a 500 Hz high frequency filter were visually reviewed for FR during 10-minute artifact-free sleep epochs. All artifacts were excluded, and the presence or absence of scalp FRs was tallied. Data were assessed with R studio: 1) continuously by years of age, and 2) by age bins: Infants (0-2 years), Children (2-13 years) and Teens (13+ years).
After a total of 1597 video-EEGs were assessed for FR, with the continuous age data analysis, FR presence was noted across the age spectrum and varied significantly across age (p=0.002 ), peaking during mid-childhood years, and less frequently detected in infants and teens. When categorized into age bins, FR prevalence was also highest in children (37.9%) compared to infants (27.1%) and adolescents (26.4%; p<0.001).
This study shows 1) that scalp FR can be visually and reliably detected in sleep in a large pediatric cohort; and 2) that scalp FR appears age-based within the pediatric population, most prevalent in children, followed by infants, and least prevalent in teens.
Authors/Disclosures
Nikhila Panyam, B Sc
PRESENTER
Ms. Panyam has nothing to disclose.
Joyce Y. Wu, MD (Lurie Children's Hospital) Dr. Wu has received personal compensation in the range of $500-$4,999 for serving on a Scientific Advisory or Data Safety Monitoring board for Biocodex. Dr. Wu has received personal compensation in the range of $500-$4,999 for serving on a Speakers Bureau for Marinus. The institution of Dr. Wu has received research support from National Institutes of Health. Dr. Wu has received personal compensation in the range of $500-$4,999 for serving as a Study section member with National Institutes of Health.