| Literature DB >> 32112610 |
Umesh Vivekananda1,2, Stephanie Mellor1, Tim M Tierney1, Niall Holmes3, Elena Boto3, James Leggett3, Gillian Roberts3, Ryan M Hill3, Vladimir Litvak1, Matthew J Brookes3, Richard Bowtell3, Gareth R Barnes1, Matthew C Walker2.
Abstract
We demonstrate the first use of Optically Pumped Magnetoencephalography (OP-MEG) in an epilepsy patient with unrestricted head movement. Current clinical MEG uses a traditional SQUID system, where sensors are cryogenically cooled and housed in a helmet in which the patient's head is fixed. Here, we use a different type of sensor (OPM), which operates at room temperature and can be placed directly on the patient's scalp, permitting free head movement. We performed OP-MEG recording in a patient with refractory focal epilepsy. OP-MEG-identified analogous interictal activity to scalp EEG, and source localized this activity to an appropriate brain region.Entities:
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Year: 2020 PMID: 32112610 PMCID: PMC7085997 DOI: 10.1002/acn3.50995
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ann Clin Transl Neurol ISSN: 2328-9503 Impact factor: 4.511
Figure 1Use of OP‐MEG in epilepsy. (A1) Rendered image of 3D scanner‐cast. (A2) First‐generation (left) and second‐generation (right) OPM sensor. (B) Schematic of position of OPM sensors on the scalp for second recording session. (C) Example traces of typical epileptiform activity from scalp EEG and OP‐MEG including spike and wave, sharp and slow wave, and sharp wave. Red denotes channels with highest‐amplitude spikes. EEG labeled with average reference montage; Black bar = 1 second. (D) Source reconstruction of average interictal spike activity using OP‐MEG; D1 coronal, D2 sagittal, and D3 axial using dipole fit. (E) Postoperative MRI demonstrating likely removal of same average MEG dipole. (F) Field map (measured left and modeled right) corresponding to the epileptic spike with sensor positions shown in relation to the inner skull mesh. Inset shows example average OP‐MEG sharp wave used for reconstruction.