Scalp high‐frequency oscillations differentiate neonates with seizures from healthy neonates

Author:

Cserpan Dorottya1ORCID,Guidi Greta1,Alessandri Beatrice1,Fedele Tommaso1,Rüegger Andrea1,Pisani Francesco2,Sarnthein Johannes34ORCID,Ramantani Georgia145ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Neuropediatrics University Children's Hospital Zurich Switzerland

2. Department of Human Neurosciences, Child Neurology and Psychiatry Unit Sapienza University of Rome Rome Italy

3. Department of Neurosurgery University Hospital Zurich Zurich Switzerland

4. University of Zurich Zurich Switzerland

5. Children's Research Center University Children's Hospital Zurich Switzerland

Abstract

AbstractObjectiveWe aimed to investigate (1) whether an automated detector can capture scalp high‐frequency oscillations (HFO) in neonates and (2) whether scalp HFO rates can differentiate neonates with seizures from healthy neonates.MethodsWe considered 20 neonates with EEG‐confirmed seizures and four healthy neonates. We applied a previously validated automated HFO detector to determine scalp HFO rates in quiet sleep.ResultsEtiology in neonates with seizures included hypoxic‐ischemic encephalopathy in 11 cases, structural vascular lesions in 6, and genetic causes in 3. The HFO rates were significantly higher in neonates with seizures (0.098 ± 0.091 HFO/min) than in healthy neonates (0.038 ± 0.025 HFO/min; P = 0.02) with a Hedge's g value of 0.68 indicating a medium effect size. The HFO rate of 0.1 HFO/min/ch yielded the highest Youden index in discriminating neonates with seizures from healthy neonates. In neonates with seizures, etiology, status epilepticus, EEG background activity, and seizure patterns did not significantly impact HFO rates.SignificanceNeonatal scalp HFO can be detected automatically and differentiate neonates with seizures from healthy neonates. Our observations have significant implications for neuromonitoring in neonates. This is the first step in establishing neonatal HFO as a biomarker for neonatal seizures.

Funder

EMDO Stiftung

Schweizerischer Nationalfonds zur Förderung der Wissenschaftlichen Forschung

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Neurology (clinical),Neurology

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