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Diagnostic Role of ECG Recording Simultaneously With EEG Testing. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • Arrhythmias can cause syncope that resembles epilepsy, and there's growing evidence of vagal tonus issues linked to epilepsy.
  • In a study of 376 patients, ECG abnormalities were found in 18% of those undergoing EEG for epilepsy evaluation, with higher rates in females compared to males.
  • The findings suggest that simultaneous ECG and EEG recordings are crucial for identifying significant heart issues that could mimic seizures or interfere with epilepsy treatment.

Article Abstract

Arrhythmia is not uncommon in the etiology of syncope which mimics epilepsy. Data about the epilepsy induced vagal tonus abnormalities have being increasingly reported. So we aimed to evaluate what a neurologist may gain by a simultaneous electrocardiogram (ECG) and electroencephalogram (EEG) recording in the patients who underwent EEG testing due to prediagnosis of epilepsy. We retrospectively evaluated and detected ECG abnormalities in 68 (18%) of 376 patients who underwent EEG testing. A minimum of 20 of minutes artifact-free recording were required for each patient. Standard 1-channel ECG was simultaneously recorded in conjunction with the EEG. In all, 28% of females and 14% of males had ECG abnormalities. Females (mean age 49 years, range 18-88 years) were older compared with the male group (mean age 28 years, range 16-83 years). Atrial fibrillation was more frequent in female group whereas bradycardia and respiratory sinus arrhythmia was higher in male group. One case had been detected a critical asystole indicating sick sinus syndrome in the female group and treated with a pacemaker implantation in the following period. Simultaneous ECG recording in conjunction with EEG testing is a clinical prerequisite to detect and to clarify the coexisting ECG and EEG abnormalities and their clinical relevance. Potentially rare lethal causes of syncope that mimic seizure or those that could cause resistance to antiepileptic therapy could effectively be distinguished by detecting ECG abnormalities coinciding with the signs and abnormalities during EEG recording.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1550059414551554DOI Listing

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