In‐hospital and home‐based long‐term monitoring of focal epilepsy with a wearable electroencephalographic device: Diagnostic yield and user experience

J Macea, M Bhagubai, V Broux, M De Vos… - …, 2023 - Wiley Online Library
Objective The aim is to report the performance of an electroencephalogram (EEG) seizure‐
detector algorithm on data obtained with a wearable device (WD) in patients with focal …

[HTML][HTML] Electrographic seizure monitoring with a novel, wireless, single-channel EEG sensor

MA Frankel, MJ Lehmkuhle, M Watson, K Fetrow… - Clinical …, 2021 - Elsevier
Objective Recording seizures using personal seizure diaries can be challenging during
everyday life and many seizures are missed or mis-reported. People living with epilepsy …

[HTML][HTML] Towards a wearable multi-modal seizure detection system in epilepsy: A pilot study

JM Nielsen, IC Zibrandtsen, P Masulli… - Clinical …, 2022 - Elsevier
Objective To explore the possibilities of wearable multi-modal monitoring in epilepsy and to
identify effective strategies for seizure-detection. Methods Thirty patients with suspected …

Automated detection of absence seizures using a wearable electroencephalographic device: a phase 3 validation study and feasibility of automated behavioral testing

G Japaridze, D Loeckx, T Buckinx, S Armand Larsen… - …, 2023 - Wiley Online Library
Objective Our primary goal was to measure the accuracy of fully automated absence seizure
detection, using a wearable electroencephalographic (EEG) device. As a secondary goal …

Improving long‐term management of epilepsy using a wearable multimodal seizure detection system

S Sabesan, R Sankar - Epilepsy & Behavior, 2015 - epilepsybehavior.com
Background: The effective management of epilepsy necessitates reliable long‐term (over
days and months) monitoring of seizures. Although visual inspection of …

Wearable electroencephalography for ultra-long-term seizure monitoring: a systematic review and future prospects

JM Nielsen, D Rades, TW Kjaer - Expert Review of Medical Devices, 2021 - Taylor & Francis
Introduction Wearable electroencephalography (EEG) for objective seizure counting might
transform the clinical management of epilepsy. Non-EEG modalities have been validated for …

Wearable seizure detection devices in refractory epilepsy

J Verdru, W Van Paesschen - Acta Neurologica Belgica, 2020 - Springer
Epilepsy affects 50 million patients and their caregivers worldwide. Devices that facilitate the
detection of seizures can have a large influence on a patient's quality of life, therapeutic …

Real‐world user experience with seizure detection wearable devices in the home environment

L Hadady, P Klivényi, D Fabó, S Beniczky - Epilepsia, 2023 - Wiley Online Library
Objective To evaluate direct user experience with wearable seizure detection devices in the
home environment. Methods A structured online questionnaire was completed by 242 users …

[HTML][HTML] Non-electroencephalogram-based seizure detection devices: State of the art and future perspectives

PM Larsen, S Beniczky - Epilepsy & Behavior, 2023 - Elsevier
Introduction and purpose The continuously expanding research and development of
wearable devices for automated seizure detection in epilepsy uses mostly non-invasive …

The power of ECG in multimodal patient‐specific seizure monitoring: added value to an EEG‐based detector using limited channels

K Vandecasteele, T De Cooman, C Chatzichristos… - …, 2021 - Wiley Online Library
Objective Wearable seizure detection devices could provide more reliable seizure
documentation outside the hospital compared to seizure self‐reporting by patients, which is …