Introduction: This study evaluated the accuracy of motion signals extracted from video monitoring data to differentiate epileptic motor seizures in patients with drug-resistant epilepsy. 3D near-infrared video was recorded by the Nelli seizure monitoring system (Tampere, Finland).
Methods: 10 patients with 130 seizures were included in the training dataset, and 17 different patients with 98 seizures formed the testing dataset. Only seizures with unequivocal hyperkinetic, tonic, and tonic-clonic semiology were included. Motion features from the catch22 feature collection extracted from video were explored to transform the patients' videos into numerical time series for clustering and visualization.
Results: Changes in feature generation provided incremental discrimination power to differentiate between hyperkinetic, tonic, and tonic-clonic seizures. Temporal motion features showed the best results in the unsupervised clustering analysis. Using these features, the system differentiated hyperkinetic, tonic and tonic-clonic seizures with 91, 88, and 45% accuracy after 100 cross-validation runs, respectively. F1-scores were 93, 90, and 37%, respectively. Overall accuracy and f1-score were 74%.
Conclusion: The selected features of motion distinguished semiological differences within epileptic seizure types, enabling seizure classification to distinct motor seizure types. Further studies are needed with a larger dataset and additional seizure types. These results indicate the potential of video-based hybrid seizure monitoring systems to facilitate seizure classification improving the algorithmic processing and thus streamlining the clinical workflow for human annotators in hybrid (algorithmic-human) seizure monitoring systems.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fneur.2023.1270482 | DOI Listing |
Epilepsy Behav
December 2024
Department of Neurosurgery, Örebro University Hospital, Sweden; Department of Neurosurgery and Department of Biomedical and Clinical Sciences, Linköping University, Sweden; School of Medical Sciences, Faulty of Medicine and Health, Örebro University, Sweden.
Objective: The objective of this study was to evaluate the diagnostic yield and clinical utility of an automated AI video-based seizure detection device, Nelli®, (SDD) in pharmacoresistant epilepsy patients. The SDD captures and automatically classifies nocturnal motor behavior suggestive of epileptic seizures or non-epileptic motor behavior of potential clinical value.
Methods: Patients with focal epilepsy and pharmacoresistance referred for inpatient long-term video-EEG monitoring were prospectively recruited.
Eur J Neurol
January 2025
Department of Neurology C, Parkinson Expert Center, Pierre Wertheimer Neurological Hospital, Hospices Civils de Lyon, Bron, France.
Background And Purpose: Disabling dystonia despite optimal medical treatment is common in Wilson disease (WD). No controlled study has evaluated the effect of deep brain stimulation (DBS) on dystonia related to WD. This study was undertaken to evaluate the efficacy of DBS on dystonia related to WD.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEpileptic Disord
December 2024
Faculty of Medicine and Health Technology, Tampere University, Tampere, Finland.
Objective: In this study, characteristics of signal profiles formed by motion, oscillation, and sound signals were analyzed to evaluate generalizability and variability in a single patient setting (intra-patient variability) and between patients (inter-patient variability). As a secondary objective, the effect of brivaracetam intervention on signal profiles was explored.
Methods: Patient data included 13 hyperkinetic seizures, 65 tonic seizures, 13 tonic-clonic seizures, and 138 motor seizures from 11 patients.
Rinsho Shinkeigaku
August 2024
Epilepsy and Sleep Center, Fukuoka Sanno Hospital.
The insula is often referred to as "the fifth lobe" of the brain, and its accessibility used to be very limited due to the deep location under the opercula as well as the sylvian vasculature. It was not until the availability of modern stereo-electroencephalography (SEEG) technique that the intracranial electrodes could be safely and chronically implanted within the insula, thereby enabling anatomo-electro-clinical correlations in seizures of this deep origin. Since the first report of SEEG-recorded insular seizures in late 1990s, the knowledge of insular lobe epilepsy (ILE) has rapidly expanded.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCureus
May 2024
Emergency Department, St. Joseph Medical Center, Bethpage, USA.
Dyskinetic movements are characterized as hyperkinetic, repetitive movements of the extremities, facial, and oral musculature, most associated with prolonged dopamine D2 receptor blockade. In rare instances, dyskinetic movements can be brought on by selective serotonin reuptake inhibitor (SSRI) usage via an indirect D2 blockade mechanism, mimicking the D2 blockade observed with dopamine receptor blocking agents (DRBAs), such as in first-generation antipsychotics. This mimicked D2 blockade by SSRIs is said to be due to increased tonic inhibition by serotonin on dopaminergic neurons in the dopaminergic pathways of the brain, specifically the nigrostriatal pathway.
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