Northeast Center For Special Care: Information Bulletin
Northeast Center For Special Care: Information Bulletin
Northeast Center For Special Care: Information Bulletin
www.northeastcenter.com
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Information Bulletin
While other brain imaging techniques (e.g., CT, MRI, PET, SPECT)
measure such properties as cerebral blood flow, metabolism or
structural integrity, QEEG measures electrical activity of the brain. It
provides complex analysis of such brainwave characteristics as
symmetry, phase, coherence, amplitude, power and dominant
frequency. In fact, subtle disruptions of electrical connectivity and flow
How is it Done?
An elastic cap with 19 sensors is placed on the head and the sensors
are connected to the recording device. A special conductive gel is
squeezed into each of the 19 sensors in the cap. This preparation
takes approximately 15 minutes. The actual recording might take from
10 to 30 minutes.
Example 1
Excessive Theta waves (4-8 Hz) at the central & left parietal area due
to traumatic brain injury, presented in 1 Hz slices. Red color
represents increased slow wave activity at the site of the injury.
Example 3
Example 4
Example 6
Seen here are diminished fast Beta waves in the Frontal lobes (blue)
and excessive slow Theta waves in the Hippocampus (red), indicative
of the early stages of Alzheimer’s disease.
Clinicians that are considering QEEG in their practice are often faced
with complex choices of multi-channel EEG recoding devices, data
analysis software programs and normative databases. Internet
resources such as the International Society for Neuronal Regulation
www.insr.org (International Society for Neuronal Regulation) may be
helpful in providing information or journal articles describing relative
merits of various systems.
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