This atlas serves as a comprehensive working reference for a wide range of clinicians practicing in the field of clinical neurophysiology, including adult and pediatric neurologists, epileptologists, neurocritical care specialists, and electroneurodiagnostic technologists. Covering EEG, EMG, MEG, evoked potentials, sleep and autonomic studies, and ICU, critical care, and intraoperative monitoring, expert authors share examples of common and novel artifacts and highlight signature features to help practitioners recognize patterns and make accurate distinctions. This visual compendium of information in atlas format addresses the artifact in all areas of clinical neurophysiology and highlights the traps and pitfalls that can taint studies and lead to misdiagnosis if not properly identified.
Atlas of Artifacts in Clinical Neurophysiology provides full-page examples of waveforms and recordings to enhance appreciation of the nuances involved in distinguishing artifacts from neurological findings that require intervention. With the most up-to-date information available on artifacts present during procedures in both adult and pediatric patients, this book provides readers with an in-depth understanding of artifact interpretation that is essential to any clinician working in the field of clinical neurophysiology given the ubiquitous nature of artifact during electrophysiological recording.
Key Features:
- The only dedicated reference on artifacts in all areas of clinical neurophysiologic testing
- Large-format examples of both common and unusual artifacts encountered in each procedure category
- Up-to-date text in each chapter provides greater depth of explanation
- Draws on the expertise and clinical wisdom of leading practitioners to develop mastery in recognizing artifacts and avoiding diagnostic pitfalls
- Includes access to the digital ebook and 19 videos
Table des matières
Contents
Contributors
Preface
Acknowledgment
1. Clinical Neurophysiology: An Overview
Edward C. Mader, Jr., Daniella Miller, and Piotr W. Olejniczak
2. Equipment and Instrumentation
Jonathan J. Halford
3. Pediatric Clinical Neurophysiology
Gloria Galloway and Thoru Yamada
4. Artifacts of Neuromonitoring
Jason Siegel and David Freeman
5. Electroencephalography and Artifact in the Intensive Care Unit
Nishi Rampal, Carolina B. Maciel, and Lawrence J. Hirsch
6. Artifact in Pediatric Electroencephalography
Erika Takle Axeen and Phillip L. Pearl
7. Adult Electroencephalography Artifact
William O. Tatum, IV
8. Artifacts in Pediatric and Adult Magnetoencephalography
Christos Papadelis, Michel Al Hilani, and Phillip L. Pearl
9. Nerve Conduction Studies and Needle Electromyography
Devon I. Rubin and Ruple S. Laughlin
10. Artifact in Autonomic Neurophysiology Studies
William P. Cheshire, Jr.
11. Polysomnographic Artifacts
Madeleine Grigg-Damberger
12. Artifacts in Evoked Potential Recordings
Alan D. Legatt
13. Artifacts in Neurophysiologic Intraoperative Monitoring
Aatif M. Husain, Stephanie L. Schwartz, and Emily B. Kale
14. Artifact Reduction
Tasneem F. Hasan and William O. Tatum, IV
Epilogue
Index
A propos de l’auteur
Dr. William O. Tatum, IV, DO, is Professor, Department of Neurology, Mayo College of Medicine and Director, Epilepsy Monitoring Unit, Mayo Clinic, Jacksonville, Florida