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Assessment of Human Sleep Depth Is Being De-Standardized by Recently Advised EEG Electrode Locations

Human sleep depth was traditionally assessed by scoring electro-encephalographic slow-wave amplitudes at the globally standardized C4-M1 electrode derivation. Since 2007, the American Association of Sleep Medicine (AASM) has accepted three additional derivations for the same purpose. These might wel...

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Autores principales: Kemp, Bob, van Someren, Paul, Roessen, Marco, van Dijk, J. Gert
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2013
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3733975/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23940727
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0071234
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author Kemp, Bob
van Someren, Paul
Roessen, Marco
van Dijk, J. Gert
author_facet Kemp, Bob
van Someren, Paul
Roessen, Marco
van Dijk, J. Gert
author_sort Kemp, Bob
collection PubMed
description Human sleep depth was traditionally assessed by scoring electro-encephalographic slow-wave amplitudes at the globally standardized C4-M1 electrode derivation. Since 2007, the American Association of Sleep Medicine (AASM) has accepted three additional derivations for the same purpose. These might well differ in slow wave amplitudes which would bias the scorings. Some derivations might also introduce large inter-individual variability. We compared mean and variability of slow wave amplitudes between six derivations including the four AASM ones. Slow wave amplitudes in those derivations were simultaneously measured using automated analysis in 29 patients. Each amplitude was divided by the average from the six derivations, thus removing shared factors such as age, gender and sleep depth while retaining factors that differ between the derivations such as caused by local skull characteristics, electrode distance and neuronal dipole orientation. The remaining inter-individual variability differed significantly and up to a factor of two between the AASM derivations. The amplitudes differed significantly and up to 60% between the AASM derivations, causing substantial scoring bias between centres using different derivations. The resulting de-standardization most likely affects any patient group because the amplitude differences were consistent over diagnoses, genders, and age. Derivation-dependent amplitude thresholds were proposed to reduce the scoring bias. However, it would be better to settle on just one derivation, for instance Cz-Oz or Fpz-Cz because these have lowest variability while matching the traditional C4-M1 amplitudes.
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spelling pubmed-37339752013-08-12 Assessment of Human Sleep Depth Is Being De-Standardized by Recently Advised EEG Electrode Locations Kemp, Bob van Someren, Paul Roessen, Marco van Dijk, J. Gert PLoS One Research Article Human sleep depth was traditionally assessed by scoring electro-encephalographic slow-wave amplitudes at the globally standardized C4-M1 electrode derivation. Since 2007, the American Association of Sleep Medicine (AASM) has accepted three additional derivations for the same purpose. These might well differ in slow wave amplitudes which would bias the scorings. Some derivations might also introduce large inter-individual variability. We compared mean and variability of slow wave amplitudes between six derivations including the four AASM ones. Slow wave amplitudes in those derivations were simultaneously measured using automated analysis in 29 patients. Each amplitude was divided by the average from the six derivations, thus removing shared factors such as age, gender and sleep depth while retaining factors that differ between the derivations such as caused by local skull characteristics, electrode distance and neuronal dipole orientation. The remaining inter-individual variability differed significantly and up to a factor of two between the AASM derivations. The amplitudes differed significantly and up to 60% between the AASM derivations, causing substantial scoring bias between centres using different derivations. The resulting de-standardization most likely affects any patient group because the amplitude differences were consistent over diagnoses, genders, and age. Derivation-dependent amplitude thresholds were proposed to reduce the scoring bias. However, it would be better to settle on just one derivation, for instance Cz-Oz or Fpz-Cz because these have lowest variability while matching the traditional C4-M1 amplitudes. Public Library of Science 2013-08-05 /pmc/articles/PMC3733975/ /pubmed/23940727 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0071234 Text en © 2013 Kemp et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Kemp, Bob
van Someren, Paul
Roessen, Marco
van Dijk, J. Gert
Assessment of Human Sleep Depth Is Being De-Standardized by Recently Advised EEG Electrode Locations
title Assessment of Human Sleep Depth Is Being De-Standardized by Recently Advised EEG Electrode Locations
title_full Assessment of Human Sleep Depth Is Being De-Standardized by Recently Advised EEG Electrode Locations
title_fullStr Assessment of Human Sleep Depth Is Being De-Standardized by Recently Advised EEG Electrode Locations
title_full_unstemmed Assessment of Human Sleep Depth Is Being De-Standardized by Recently Advised EEG Electrode Locations
title_short Assessment of Human Sleep Depth Is Being De-Standardized by Recently Advised EEG Electrode Locations
title_sort assessment of human sleep depth is being de-standardized by recently advised eeg electrode locations
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3733975/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23940727
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0071234
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