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Awake and sleep EEG : activation procedures and artifacts / Philippe Gélisse and Arielle Crespel.
- Format:
- Book
- Author/Creator:
- Gélisse, Philippe, author.
- Crespel, Arielle, author.
- Series:
- Atlas of electroencephalography ; Volume 1.
- Atlas of Electroencephalography ; Volume 1
- Language:
- English
- Subjects (All):
- Electroencephalography--Atlases.
- Electroencephalography.
- Physical Description:
- 1 online resource (407 pages) : illustrations.
- Edition:
- Second edition.
- Place of Publication:
- Surrey, England : John Libbey Eurotext, 2016.
- Summary:
- A useful tool to analyze physiological EEG awake and sleep activities in children and adults.
- Contents:
- EEG Awake and sleep EEG - Activation procedures and Artifacts
- PREFACE
- THE AUTHORS
- INTRODUCTION
- EEG RECORDINGS
- GLOSSARY
- CHAPITRE I - Normal awake electroencephalogramand unusual EEG patterns
- BACKGROUND OR FUNDAMENTAL ACTIVITY
- OTHER RHYTHMS
- I 1 Background activity in a child with posterior slow waves (1)
- I 2 Background activity in a child with posterior slow waves (2)
- I 3 Posterior rhythmic delta activity in a child with childhood absence epilepsy
- I 4 Temporal Intermittent Rythmic Delta Activity (TIRDA) in an adolescent with juvenile absence epilepsy
- I 5 Background activity in an adult, reactivity of the alpha rhythm and beta rhythms
- I 6 Beta rhythms in a child with posterior slow waves
- I 7 Background activity in an adult, notched alpha waves and beta rhythms
- I 8 Slow alpha variant: subharmonic (1)
- I 9 Slow alpha variant: subharmonic (2)
- I 10 Slow alpha variant: subharmonic (3)
- I 11 Fast alpha variant (1)
- I 12 Fast alpha variant (2)
- I 13 Mu rhythm in an infant
- I 14 Mu rhythm in a child
- I 15 Mu rhythm and alpha reactivity in an adult
- I 16 Reactivity of the mu rhythm in an adult
- I 17 Posterior mu rhythm in an adult
- I 18 Slow mu variant
- I 19 Lambda waves in an adult
- I 20 Lambda waves in an adult which disappear with point fixation and paradoxical alpha
- I 21 Lambda waves in an adult which disappear with point fixation
- I 22 Midline theta rhythm (Cigánek rhythm) (1)
- I 23 Midline theta rhythm (Cigánek rhythm) (2)
- I 24 Subclinical Rhythmic Electrographic Discharges in Adults (SREDA) (1)
- I 25 Subclinical Rhythmic Electrographic Discharges in Adults (SREDA) (2)
- I 26 Subclinical Rhythmic Electrographic Discharges in Adults (SREDA) (3).
- I 27 Subclinical Rhythmic Electrographic Discharges in Adults (SREDA) (4)
- I 28 Subclinical Rhythmic Electrographic Discharges in Adults (SREDA) (5)
- I 29 Temporal theta acitivity (wicket spikes)
- I 30 Temporal theta-delta activity (wicket spikes)
- I 31 Temporal theta-delta activity (rhythmic midtemporal discharges)
- I 32 Breach rhythm (1)
- I 33 Breach rhythm (2)
- I 34 Breach rhythm (3)
- I 35 Breach rhythm (4)
- I 36 Breach rhythm in a patient after cortectomy with sequelae of brain trauma
- I 37 When the EEG complicates the situation. Benign spike-waves without epilepsy (1)
- I 38 When the EEG complicates the situation. Benign spike-waves without epilepsy (2)
- I 39 When the EEG complicates the situation. Generalized spike-waves without epilepsy
- CHAPITRE II - Activation procedures
- HYPERVENTILATION
- INTERMITTENT PHOTIC STIMULATION
- EYE COMPRESSION
- II 1 Hyperventilation hypersynchrony (1)
- II 2 Hyperventilation hypersynchrony (2)
- II 3 Hyperventilation hypersynchrony (3)
- II 4 Physiological slow waves during hyperventilation
- II 5 Generalized spike-waves during hyperventilation
- II 6 A typical absence seizure occurring during hyperventilation
- II 7 Focal slow waves during hyperventilation
- II 8 Slow waves after hyperventilation (Moyamoya disease)
- II 9 Photic driving in an infant
- II 10 Photic driving at low frequency in a child
- II 11 Photic driving in a child
- II 12 Photic driving in an adult (1): subharmonic
- II 13 Photic driving in an adult (2)
- II 14 Photic driving in an adult (3)
- II 15 Photic driving in an adult (4)
- II 16 Fast alpha variant appearing during photic stimulation
- II 17 Pathological photic driving
- II 18 Photomyogenic response (1)
- II 19 Photomyogenic response (2).
- II 20 Paroxysmal photosensitive response (photoparoxysmal response) (1)
- II 21 Paroxysmal photosensitive response (photoparoxysmal response) (2)
- II 22 Paroxysmal photosensitive response (photoparoxysmal response) (3)
- II 23 Paroxysmal photosensitive response (photoparoxysmal response) at the same frequency as the flashes
- II 24 Asymmetrical paroxysmal photosensitive response (photoparoxysmal response)
- II 25 Myoclonic jerks triggered by intermittent photic stimulation
- II 26 Absence triggered by intermittent photic stimulation (1)
- II 27 Absence triggered by intermittent photic stimulation (2)
- II 28 Focal seizure triggered by intermittent photic stimulation
- II 29 Paroxysmal photosensitive response (photoparoxysmal response) triggered by television
- II 30 When the EEG complicates the situation! Paroxysmal photosensitive response (photoparoxysmal response) without epilepsy
- II 31 Heart arrest triggered by eye compression
- II 32 Syncope triggered by eye compression (1)
- II 33 Syncope triggered by eye compression (2)
- II 34 Syncope triggered by eye compression (3)
- II 35 Syncope triggered by eye compression (4)
- CHAPITRE III - EEG and sleep
- SLEEP DEPRIVATION PROCEDURE
- DIFFERENT STAGES OF SLEEP
- SLEEP ARCHITECTURE
- DROWSINESS
- STAGE N1
- STAGE N2
- DEEP SLEEP
- REM SLEEP
- AROUSAL AND AWAKENING IN SLEEP
- OTHER PHYSIOLOGICAL RHYTHMS AND UNUSUAL RHYTHMS IN SLEEP
- III 1 Hypnagogic hypersynchrony (1)
- III 2 Hypnagogic hypersynchrony (2)
- III 3 Hypnagogic hypersynchrony (3)
- III 4 Drowsiness in a child (1)
- III 5 Drowsiness in a child (2)
- III 6 Drowsiness in an adolescent
- III 7 Fluctuation of level of consciousness in an elderly person
- III 8 Beta rhythm
- III 9 NREM 1: Vertex waves in a child.
- III 10 NREM 1: A train of vertex waves in a child
- III 11 NREM 1: Vertex waves in an adolescent
- III 12 NREM 1: Vertex waves in an adult (1)
- III 13 NREM 1: Vertex waves in an adult (2)
- III 14 NREM 2: Physiological elements in an infant (1)
- III 15 NREM 2: Physiological elements in an infant (2)
- III 16 NREM 2: Physiological elements in a young child
- III 17 NREM 2: Physiological elements in a child
- III 18 NREM 2: Physiological elements in an adolescent
- III 19 NREM 2: Physiological elements in an adult (1)
- III 20 NREM 2: Physiological elements in an adult (2)
- III 21 NREM 2: Physiological elements in an adult (3)
- III 22 NREM 3: Deep sleep in an infant
- III 23 NREM 3: Deep sleep in an adult
- III 24 Deep sleep in a child with superimposed theta rhythms
- III 25 Deep sleep in an adult with superimposed alpha rhythms
- III 26 REM sleep: Transition from stage N2 sleep
- III 27 REM sleep: Transition from stage N2 sleep
- III 28 REM sleep in an infant
- III 29 REM sleep in a young child
- III 30 REM sleep in a child
- III 31 REM sleep: alpha activity, sawtooth waves
- III 32 REM sleep: alpha activity, sawtooth waves and mu rhythm
- III 33 REM sleep: sawtooth waves and muscle twitches
- III 34 REM sleep: posterior theta rhythm
- III 35 REM sleep: Slow alpha variant
- III 36 REM sleep: beta rhythms
- III 37 REM sleep: beta rhythms, muscle atonia and muscle twitches
- III 38 Transient arousal
- III 39 Arousal: K alpha
- III 40 Arousal: Postarousal hypersynchrony in an infant
- III 41 Arousal reaction: Hypersynchronous delta activity (1)
- III 42 Arousal reaction: Hypersynchronous delta activity (2)
- III 43 Arousal reaction: Frontal arousal rhythms in a young child
- III 44 Arousal reaction: Frontal arousal rhythms in a child.
- III 45 Arousal reaction: Frontal arousal rhythms in an adolescent
- III 46 Positive occipital sharp transients of sleep (POSTs) in NREM sleep stage 2 (1)
- III 47 Positive occipital sharp transients of sleep (POSTs) in NREM sleep stage 2 (2)
- III 48 Positive occipital sharp transients of sleep (POSTs) in NREM sleep stage 2 (3)
- III 49 A train of positive occipital sharp transients of sleep (POSTs) in NREM sleep stage 2
- III 50 Positive occipital sharp transients of sleep (POSTs) in NREM sleep stage 3
- III 51 Alpha-like activity in NREM Sleep
- III 52 Wicket spikes (1)
- III 53 Wicket spikes (2)
- III 54 Wicket spikes (3)
- III 55 Wicket spikes (4)
- III 56 Wicket spikes in REM sleep
- III 57 Small Sharp Spikes (SSS)/ Benign sporadic sleep spikes/ Benign epileptiform transients of sleep (1)
- III 58 Small Sharp Spikes (SSS)/ Benign sporadic sleep spikes/ Benign epileptiform transients of sleep (2)
- III 59 Fourteen- and six-Hertz positive bursts during REM sleep in a child
- III 60 Fourteen- and six-Hertz positive bursts during REM sleep in an adult (1)
- III 61 Fourteen- and six-Hertz positive bursts during REM sleep in an adult (2)
- III 62 Fourteen- and six-Hertz positive bursts during REM sleep in an adult (3)
- III 63 Fourteen- and six-Hertz positive bursts during NREM sleep in an adult
- III 64 Rhythmic midtemporal discharges
- III 65 Rhythmic midtemporal discharges in a patient with idiopathic generalized epilepsy (1)
- III 66 Rhythmic midtemporal discharges in a patient with idiopathic generalized epilepsy (2)
- III 67 Rhythmic midtemporal discharges in a patient with idiopathic generalized epilepsy (3)
- III 68 Rhythmic midtemporal discharges in a patient with temporal lobe epilepsy
- III 69 Rhythmic midtemporal discharges in REM Sleep (1).
- III 70 Mu rhythm and rhythmic midtemporal discharges in REM Sleep (2).
- Notes:
- Includes bibliographical references and index.
- Description based on online resource; title from PDF title page (ebrary, viewed November 14, 2017).
- ISBN:
- 2-7420-1536-1
- OCLC:
- 1007049866
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