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Visual Evoked Potentials

Journal of Clinical Neurophysiology, 1994
The recording of visual evoked potentials (VEPs) is an important means of obtaining reproducible, quantitative data on the function of the anterior visual pathways. In this review, the technical aspects of recording VEPs are briefly discussed, components of the VEPs are described, and the clinical uses of VEPs are considered.
M J, Aminoff, D S, Goodin
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Auditory evoked potentials.

Minerva anestesiologica, 2004
Auditory evoked potentials (AEPs) are an electrical manifestation of the brain response to an auditory stimulus. Mid-latency auditory evoked potentials (MLAEPs) and the coherent frequency of the AEP are the most promising for monitoring depth of anaesthesia.
De Cosmo, Germano   +3 more
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Visually evoked potentials

2019
The term visually evoked potential (VEP) refers to electrical potentials recorded from scalp overlying visual cortex that have been extracted from the electroencephalogram by signal averaging. Usually the recording electrode is placed on the midline of the occipital scalp at the back of the head.
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Vestibular evoked potentials

Current Opinion in Neurology, 2001
Loud clicks, short tone bursts, head taps and short duration transmastoid currents are all capable of activating vestibular receptors and evoking reflex changes in tonic electromyogram activity within the sternocleidomastoid muscles. Because they derive from averaged electromyograms, the responses are termed 'vestibular evoked myogenic potentials'. The
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Evoked Potentials

2023
Abstract Evoked potentials are electrophysiologic responses of the nervous system to electrical stimuli. They involve applying a current to a sensory nerve and measuring the response on the sensory cortex with a scalp electrode. They serve as a surrogate measure for neurologic functional integrity for patients under general anesthesia ...
Timothy Ford, Alaa Abd-Elsayed
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Vestibular Evoked Myogenic Potentials

Current Opinion in Otolaryngology & Head & Neck Surgery, 2005
Vestibular evoked myogenic potential testing is the only clinically feasible way to measure function of the saccule. Interest in this test has exploded in recent years because of its potential utility in diagnosing third-window disorders and in diagnosing and monitoring Ménière's disease.Recent literature on vestibular evoked myogenic potential covers ...
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Evoked Potentials

2021
Abstract Evoked potentials provide a noninvasive, sensitive, and quantitative way to assess the functional integrity of the somatosensory, auditory, and visual pathways. The basic principle of evoked potentials is to apply a stimulus (sensory, auditory, or visual) in a controlled manner to create a volley of depolarization and ...
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SOMATOSENSORY EVOKED POTENTIALS

International Anesthesiology Clinics, 1990
V, Gugino, R J, Chabot
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Evoked Potentials

2015
Abstract Evoked potentials provide a noninvasive, sensitive, and quantitative way to assess the functional integrity of the somatosensory, auditory, and visual pathways. The basic principle of evoked potentials is to apply a stimulus (sensory, auditory, or visual) in a controlled manner to create a volley of depolarization and ...
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Evoked Potentials

New England Journal of Medicine, 1982
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