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EEG in neonatal seizures: where to look and what to see

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ABSTRACT Introduction Neonatal seizures are frequent and carry a detrimental prognostic outlook. Diagnosis is based on EEG confirmation. Classification has recently changed. Areas covered We consulted original papers, book chapters,… Click to show full abstract

ABSTRACT Introduction Neonatal seizures are frequent and carry a detrimental prognostic outlook. Diagnosis is based on EEG confirmation. Classification has recently changed. Areas covered We consulted original papers, book chapters, atlases, and reviews to provide a narrative overview on EEG characteristics of neonatal seizures. We searched PubMed, without time restrictions (last visited: 31 May 2022). Additional papers were extracted from the references list of selected papers. We describe the typical neonatal ictal EEG discharges morphology, location, and propagation, together with age-dependent features. Etiology-dependent electroclinical features, when identifiable, are presented for both acute symptomatic neonatal seizures and neonatal-onset epilepsies and developmental/epileptic encephalopathies. The few ictal variables known to predict long-term outcome have been discussed. Expert opinion Multimodal neuromonitoring in critically ill newborns, high-density EEG, and functional neuroimaging might increase our insight into the neurophysiological bases of seizures in newborns. Increasing availability of long-term monitoring with conventional video-EEG and automated detection methods will allow clinicians and researchers to gather an ever expanding bulk of clinical and neurophysiological data to enhance accuracy with deep phenotyping. The latest classification proposal represents an input for critically revising our diagnostic abilities with respect to seizure definition, duration, and semiology, possibly further promoting clinical research.

Keywords: seizures look; look see; eeg neonatal; neonatal seizures; semiology

Journal Title: Expert Review of Neurotherapeutics
Year Published: 2022

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