Abstract
Epileptic nystagmus (EN) is a subtle seizure semiology, most commonly seen in seizures originating in the posterior cortical regions. EN is broadly categorized into type I and type II. Type I EN consists of contralateral repetitive saccadic eye movements alternating with post-saccadic slow drifts with an overall contralateral deviation. Type II EN is characterized by ipsilateral slow drift alternating with contralateral corrective saccades. In this article, we report a method to perform oculographic analysis of eye movements using EEG only. We used this method to classify the type of EN in three patients with parieto-occipital seizures. In all three patients, the ictal EEG demonstrated repetitive saccadic eye movements, directed contralateral to the seizure onset zone. With prolonged time constant, we were able to identify this eye movement pattern as EN with distinct slow and fast phases. We were able to further characterize the type of EN as type I and type II. In all three patients, the direction of EN (direction of fast phase or saccades) was contralateral to the seizure onset zone. EN can be easily missed on video-electroencephalography (vEEG) recordings because of various reasons. Our study demonstrates a systematic method of eye movement analysis on EEG, which can be used to not only identify EN as seizure semiology but also classify it, without requiring additional electrodes.
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Acar, A., Zampino, A., & Fotedar, N. (2024). EEG based oculographic analysis of epileptic nystagmus. Epilepsy Research, 200. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.eplepsyres.2024.107311
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