Publications by authors named "W Scheuler"

Objective: To include a larger number of tetraplegics than in previous studies, in order to more reliably characterize the pathogenesis and predisposing factors of sleep apnea in tetraplegia.

Methods: Sleep breathing data and oxymetric values were investigated in 50 randomly selected tetraplegic patients and discussed in context with age, gender, BMI, neck circumference, type and height of lesion, time after injury, spirometric values and medication. A non-validated short questionnaire on daytime complaints was added.

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Fifteen patients aged between 26 and 55 years with the acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) and various cerebral manifestations of the disease underwent an all-night sleep electroencephalogram (EEG) registration. The recordings of 15 age-matched volunteers were examined as controls. Sleep stages were determined visually and the following spectral analysis was based on corresponding artifact-free 40-second periods.

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[Pattern recognition techniques in sleep polygraphy].

EEG EMG Z Elektroenzephalogr Elektromyogr Verwandte Geb

September 1991

The evaluation of EEG-patterns is usually accomplished by visual analysis. Nowadays however, even personal computers are fast enough for an efficient pattern recognition of EEG signals. Using sleep spindles and K-complexes as examples, our aim was to demonstrate how patterns can be detected in an EEG signal with a high degree of accuracy.

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All night sleep deprivation prior to an EEG registration causes some inconvenience not only to the organization of the EEG department but presents a burden on the patients as well as their family members, and for these reasons is not suitable to be frequently employed as a routine procedure. As an alternative, we performed short-term sleep recordings in the early afternoon following a partial sleep deprivation of the patients during the preceding night. This method was well accepted by the patients and their family.

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To investigate the temporal organization of EEG sleep activity in the second and minute ranges we developed a method which, based on Fourier transformation, allows the presentation of periodic oscillations of spectral power and coherence. The application of this method is demonstrated in 3 subjects with different types of alpha activity during sleep: (a) alpha-sleep pattern (a physiological variant of NREM sleep activity); (b) abnormally increased arousal alpha activity. The results show that differences in the temporal organization of these alpha activities can be determined with the following parameters: period length, duration of sequences with periodic activity, number and rate of these sequences, and proportion of periodicities generated simultaneously in the left and right hemispheres.

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