Epileptic Seizure Detection and Experimental Treatment: A Review.
Authors: Kim T, Nguyen P, Pham N, Bui N, Truong H, Ha S, Vu T
One-fourths of the patients have medication-resistant seizures and require seizure detection and treatment continuously to cope with sudden seizures. Seizures can be detected by monitoring the brain and muscle activities, heart rate, oxygen level, artificial sounds, or visual signatures through EEG, EMG, ECG, motion, or audio/video recording on the human head and body. In this article, we first discuss recent advances in seizure sensing, signal processing, time- or frequency-domain analysis, and classification algorithms to detect and classify seizure stages. Then, we show a strong potential of applying recent advancements in non-invasive brain stimulation technology to treat seizures. In particular, we explain the fundamentals of brain stimulation approaches, including (1) transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS), (2) transcranial direct current stimulation (tDCS), (3) transcranial focused ultrasound stimulation (tFUS), and how to use them to treat seizures. Through this review, we intend to provide a broad view of both recent seizure diagnoses and treatments. Such knowledge would help fresh and experienced researchers to capture the advancements in sensing, detection, classification, and treatment seizures. Last but not least, we provide potential research directions that would attract seizure researchers/engineers in the field.
Introduction
Purpose
Transcranial ultrasound stimulation
Study Objective
To review recent advances in seizure sensing, signal processing, detection and classification methods, and non-invasive brain stimulation treatments, and to outline potential research directions.
Disease model
Seizures (epilepsy)
Outcomes and Safety
Summary of Outcomes
The review summarizes advances in seizure sensing, signal processing, time-/frequency-domain analysis and classification, and highlights strong potential for non-invasive brain stimulation (TMS, tDCS, tFUS) to treat seizures. It is a review article and does not report new experimental testing of focused ultrasound parameters.
Safety-related matter
The provided text does not mention any safety issues or adverse effects related to the seizure sensing methods or the non-invasive brain stimulation treatments.
Brain Region
Ultrasound Parameters
Focal Characteristics
Focal depth: None; Focal length: None; Aperture size: None
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