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Clinics in perinatology · Sep 2006
Training neonatal staff in recording and reporting continuous electroencephalography.
- Andrew Whitelaw and Robert D White.
- Neonatal Medicine, University of Bristol Medical School, Southmead Hospital, Bristol BS10 5NB, United Kingdom. andrew.whitelaw@bristol.ac.uk
- Clin Perinatol. 2006 Sep 1;33(3):667-77, vii.
AbstractContinuous electroencephalography can contribute useful information to clinical decision-making in neonatal care. Equipment is now reliable and user-friendly enough that its use can be taught to medical and nursing staff so that a 24-hour capability is achieved. It is possible to teach neonatologists, in a 1-day course, background knowledge on EEG and amplitude-integrated EEG (aEEG), recognition of aEEG patterns that have clinical significance, recognition of seizures using aEEG and "raw" EEG, the essentials of electrode placement for aEEG, and interpretation of findings in the clinical context. This must be followed up by background reading, frequent peer-review sessions on EEG recordings, and a reliable system for storing and access, as well as willingness to consult experienced operators elsewhere.
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