Cerebral EEG Flashcards

1
Q

What are beta waves?

A

Smallest amplitude

13-30Hz

Associated with mental activity

Observed during active, alert wakefulness and REM sleep

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2
Q

What are Alpha waves?

A

Generally associated with relaxed wakefulness

Most prominent over the parietal and occipital lobe

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3
Q

What are theta waves?

A

More prominent in young

Observed during awake, drowsy and non-REM sleep states

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4
Q

What are delta waves?

A

Prominent during non-REM sleep

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5
Q

What is a current sink?

A

transient, local excess of negative charge

Caused by the flow of inward membrane current

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6
Q

What is a current source?

A

Transient, local excess of positive charge

Return of positive charge to the extracellular space

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7
Q

What are extracellular field potentials?

A

Changes in extracellular electrical charge

I.e. current sinks and sources

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8
Q

Why are extracellular potentials smaller than intracellular potentials?

A

Resistance of the extracellular space is much lower than the resistance of the plasma membrane

V = IR

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9
Q

What determines EEG amplitude?

A

The degree of synchronization within the neuronal population being measured

A very active, but desynchronized population of neurons will yield a small amplitude, high frequency EEG

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10
Q

What does EEG activity primarily reflect?

A

Synaptic activity due to the fact that these last much longer, allowing better synchronization

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11
Q

Why is the columnar organization of the neocortex important for EEGs?

A

Functionally related neurons will more likely be activated together

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12
Q

What is a sensory evoked potential?

A

Specific change in ongoing EEG activity caused by stimulation of a sensory potential

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13
Q

What is epilepsy?

A

A set of disorders characterized by chronic bouts of abnormal neuronal electrical activity

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14
Q

What are partial seizures?

A

Seizures that are restricted to one part of the brain

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15
Q

What are generalized seizures?

A

Seizures that involve abnormal activation of many areas of the brain

Involve loss of consciousness and may trigger falls, loss of muscle tone, or massive muscle spasms

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16
Q

What is a simple partial seizure?

A

Patients retain consciousness but may experience unusual feelings or sensations and may experience sudden and unexplainable feelings of joy, anger, sadness or nausea

17
Q

What is a complex partial seizure?

A

Patient has a change of consciousness, including dreamlike experiences

May be accompanied by repetitious behaviors called automatisms

18
Q

What are auras?

A

Sensations warning of an impending seizure

May precede partial seizures

19
Q

What is secondary generalization?

A

When a partial seizure spreads to involve other areas

20
Q

What are absence seizures?

A

Generalized seizure the patient may appear to be staring into space and/or exhibit muscle jerking or twitching

21
Q

What are tonic seizures?

A

Cause stiffening of muscles, generally in the back, legs, and arms

22
Q

What are clonic seizures?

A

Generalized seizures that cause repetitive jerking movements of muscles on both sides of the body

23
Q

What are atonic seizures?

A

Cause a loss of normal muscle tone, and the patient may fall

24
Q

What are tonic-clonic seizures?

A

Involve both tonic and clonic muscle contractions, includes stiffening of the body and repeated jerks of the arms and/or legs

25
Q

Describe EEG findings in a partial or focal seizure

A

Show abnormalities initiating in or restricted to only a few EEG channels

Abnormalities may be present during the interictal seizures

26
Q

Describe EEG findings in a generalized or non-focal seizures

A

Show essentially simultaneous abnormal on most or all channels of the recording

27
Q

What is postical depression?

A

A period depression, with disorientation, drowsiness or confusion and altered EEG may follow a seizure

28
Q

What are some medications used to control seizures?

A

Enhance the effectiveness o GABA neurotransmittion

Reduce the ability of neurons to generate repetitive trains of action potentials

29
Q

What are surgical options for seizure treatment?

A

Lesionectomy or lobectomy

Temporal love resection is the most common lobectomy

30
Q

What are some alternative treatments to seizures?

A

Vagal nerve stimulation

Ketogenic diet