Perinatal hypoxia remains a significant cause of brain damage. Currently there are no biomarkers to detect the at risk brain. Recent research, however, suggests that the appearance of epileptiform transients in the first 6-8 hours after hypoxia (the latent phase of injury) are predictive of neural outcome. To quantify this further a key need is to automate EEG signal analysis to aid clinical staff with the vast amounts of complex data to review. In this study, we present a semi-automated method for spike detection in the fetal sheep EEG. The method utilizes the short time Fourier transform and peak separation to extract spikes. The performance of the method was found to be high in sensitivity and selectivity over 3 distinct time points.
Published in:
Engineering in Medicine and Biology Society, 2009. EMBC 2009. Annual International Conference of the IEEE
Date of Conference: 3-6 Sept. 2009