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SSS/BETS (small sharp waves / benign epileptiform transients of sleep) - ✔✔Low
voltage, short duration, diphasic spikes with a steep descending limb. Usually seen in
drowsiness and light sleep.
SREDA (subclinical rhythmic electrographic discharges of adults) - ✔✔Sharply
contoured theta activity in the posterior head region. A normal variant in older adults
during wakefullness.
14 and 6 positive spikes - ✔✔1-2 seconds of sharply contoured discharges in the
posterior head regions in light sleep. Presents in adolescents.
6 hz spike and wave - ✔✔Midparietal low amplitude discharges. Occurs in young
adults in drowsiness and disappears in sleep.
My rhythm - ✔✔Oscillating 10 hz waves seen in leads overylying the senserimotor
cortex in the absence of movement. If a patient moves or thinks about moving their
contralateral limb, this rhythm will be suppressed.
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,Wickets - ✔✔Symmetric monophasic sharp wave occuring predominantly in older
adults during light sleep in temporal leads without disruption of the background.
3 hz slow wave activity - ✔✔3 hz waves without an associated spike which can be seen
during hyperventilation in childhood
RTTBD (rhythmic temporal theta bursts of drowsiness) - ✔✔5-6 hz rhythmic waves in
the temporal lobe. Seen in young adults during drowsiness.
Breach rhythm - ✔✔Unilateral high voltage iregular wave rhythms due to alteration of
conductance commonly seen in patients with a skull defect.
Anterior eye blinks (bells phenomenon) - ✔✔Positive downward deflection, maximal in
the frontopolar leads, followed by a negative deflection from eye opening. Disappears
in sleep.
EKG - ✔✔Rhythmic electropositive discharges in one or multiple leads, most often in
the occipital leads. Time locked and synchronous with the EKG tracing.
Pulse - ✔✔Rhythmic slow waves in a single lead due to a close pulsating vessel. Time
locked but delayed after each QRS sample.
Lateral eye movements - ✔✔Very slow out of phase derivations involving anterior
electrodes due to movement of the positively charged cornea. Best appreciated in
drowsiness and early sleep when patient experience rolling eye movements.
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, Muscle - ✔✔Extremely high frequency waves often generated from the frontalis and
temporalis muscles. Usually spares central leads. Disappears in sleep.
Glossokinetic - ✔✔Diffuse, low frequency discharges produced by movements of the
negative tip of the tongue. Can be induced by saying "la la la la", chewing, or sucking.
Electrode pop - ✔✔Single or multiple sharp waves localized to a single electrode
without a surrounding field. Disappears by reapplying an electrode.
GRDA (generalized rhythmic delta activity) - ✔✔Generalized in all leads, typically
signifies global cerebral dysfunction, such as in a severe encephalopathy, but is not to
be a risk factor for seizure or seizure tendency.
Frontally dominant GRDA - ✔✔Can be seen with a variety of pathologies including
posterior fossa lesions, intracranial lesions, and increased intraventricular pressure.
LRDA (lateralized rhythmic delta) - ✔✔Can be seen with focal lesions such a
hemorrhage, tumor, or stroke. Is associated with increased seizure risk/seizure
tendency.
LPDs (Lateralized periodic discharges) - ✔✔Often seen with focal acute or subacute
cerebral dysfunction, such as with herpes simplex enchephalitis, stroke, abscess, or
subdural hematoma.
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