| Literature DB >> 30835259 |
N J Stevenson1,2,3, K Tapani1, L Lauronen1,2, S Vanhatalo1,2.
Abstract
Neonatal seizures are a common emergency in the neonatal intensive care unit (NICU). There are many questions yet to be answered regarding the temporal/spatial characteristics of seizures from different pathologies, response to medication, effects on neurodevelopment and optimal detection. The dataset presented in this descriptor contains EEG recordings from human neonates, the visual interpretation of the EEG by the human experts, supporting clinical data and codes to assist access. Multi-channel EEG was recorded from 79 term neonates admitted to the NICU at the Helsinki University Hospital. The median recording duration was 74 min (IQR: 64 to 96 min). The presence of seizures in the EEGs was annotated independently by three experts. An average of 460 seizures were annotated per expert in the dataset; 39 neonates had seizures and 22 were seizure free, by consensus. The dataset can be used as a reference set of neonatal seizures, in studies of inter-observer agreement and for the development of automated methods of seizure detection and other EEG analyses.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30835259 PMCID: PMC6400100 DOI: 10.1038/sdata.2019.39
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Data ISSN: 2052-4463 Impact factor: 6.444
Figure 1The bipolar EEG montage used by reviewers to annotate the presence of seizures.
Figure 2The structure of the database.
Data 1, Data 2 and Data 3 can be found at Zenodo (Data Citation 1) Code can be found at https://github.com/ktapani/Neonatal_Seizure_Detection.
Figure 3Example 30 s segments of EEG from the dataset.
(a) The onset of a neonatal seizure discharge in a neonate with a right temporal haemorrhage (neonate 50; at 37 min 39 s). The seizure is prominent on the right side of the brain in derivations: Fp2-F8, F8-T4, T4-T6, T6-O2, and P4-O2. (b) The cessation of a widespread seizure discharge in a neonate with severe asphyxia (neonate 44; at 5 min 53 s); note, the muscle artefact in T6-O2 and T4-T6. (c) A period of burst suppression in a neonate with nonketotic hyperglycinemia interrupted by a high amplitude artefact at approximately 10 s on the T4-T6 and T6-O2 derivations (neonate 26; at 1 hr 2 min 34 s). (d) Recording pause expressed as zero EEG amplitude for approximately 8 s (neonate 42; at 38 min 6 s). The calibration bar (in black) denotes 100 μV (y-direction) and 1 s (x-direction) for (a) and (b), and 200 μV (y-direction) and 3 s (x-direction) for (c) and (d). In (a) and (b), annotations are plotted above the EEG signals (red, purple and green bars). Each bar denotes an independent, blinded annotation of the seizure by one expert. Data are filtered with a 6-pole Butterworth high-pass filter with a cut-off frequency of 0.5 Hz and an infinite impulse response, notch filter with a center at 50 Hz and bandwidth of 4/256 Hz.
Figure 4Distribution of periods within EEG recordings that are not cortical in origin.
(a) High amplitude activity greater than 500 μV (see Fig. 3c). (b) Recording pauses (zero EEG activity; see Fig. 3d). Note, the y-axis has a logarithmic scale for clarity.
A summary of the annotations of three reviewers.
| A (n=46) | B (n=45) | C (n=53) | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Seizure burden is defined as the accumulated duration of seizure, in minutes, within a recording, mean seizure duration is the duration of seizure events, in seconds, within a recording and seizures is the number of seizure events in a recording. Results are presented as median (IQR), n is the number of infants with at least one seizure annotated by each reviewer. | |||
| Seizure Burden (mins) | 10.2 (4.3–23.7) | 15.0 (6.6–30.3) | 8.6 (2.1–22.5) |
| Mean Seizure duration (s) | 98 (48–246) | 103 (67–288) | 82 (38–175) |
| Seizures | 5 (2–12) | 6 (2–13) | 6 (3–11) |