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Encyclopedia of Autism Spectrum Disorders, 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 ...
Benjamin Aaronson
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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 ...
Benjamin Aaronson
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Migraine classification using somatosensory evoked potentials
Cephalalgia, 2019Objective The automatic detection of migraine states using electrophysiological recordings may play a key role in migraine diagnosis and early treatment.
Bingzhao Zhu, G. Coppola, Mahsa Shoaran
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2020
The quest toward a specific biomarker for migraine stands among the biggest challenges of the last 50 years. Electrophysiological techniques are particularly suitable to study the nervous system in human beings. They are noninvasive, riskless and quite easy to perform and have a temporal resolution that cannot be achieved with other methods. Among them,
Coppola, Gianluca, Magis, Delphine
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The quest toward a specific biomarker for migraine stands among the biggest challenges of the last 50 years. Electrophysiological techniques are particularly suitable to study the nervous system in human beings. They are noninvasive, riskless and quite easy to perform and have a temporal resolution that cannot be achieved with other methods. Among them,
Coppola, Gianluca, Magis, Delphine
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American Journal of Electroneurodiagnostic Technology, 2008
Pattern reversal evoked potentials (PVEPs) are a noninvasive procedure that are useful for detecting lesions of the visual pathways. This article reviews anatomy of the visual pathway and the testing protocols for fullfield and hemifield PVEP and flash (goggle) visual evoked potentials (FVEP).
Sheryl, Nehamkin +2 more
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Pattern reversal evoked potentials (PVEPs) are a noninvasive procedure that are useful for detecting lesions of the visual pathways. This article reviews anatomy of the visual pathway and the testing protocols for fullfield and hemifield PVEP and flash (goggle) visual evoked potentials (FVEP).
Sheryl, Nehamkin +2 more
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Otolaryngologic Clinics of North America, 1991
Auditory evoked potentials (AEPs) have become an integral part of the current otologic/audiologic test battery. With these techniques, synchronous neural activity can be examined from the peripheral end organ of hearing up to the cortical structures responsible for audition.
R A, Ruth, P R, Lambert
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Auditory evoked potentials (AEPs) have become an integral part of the current otologic/audiologic test battery. With these techniques, synchronous neural activity can be examined from the peripheral end organ of hearing up to the cortical structures responsible for audition.
R A, Ruth, P R, Lambert
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Somatosensory evoked potentials
2019Somatosensory evoked potentials (SEPs) have been routinely used over the years to evaluate the somatosensory pathway and thereby supplement the diagnostic process when the history, neurologic examination, and imaging were not fully conclusive. The utilization of SEPs has become more popular in recent years despite the advance of imaging studies such as
Iryna M, Muzyka, Bachir, Estephan
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Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation Clinics of North America, 2004
Noninvasive electrical stimulation of the human brain first was attempted in the 1950s. In the early 1980s, the first clinical application method of transcranial electrical stimulation was developed. Investigators in the mid-1980s showed that it was possible to stimulate the nerve and the brain using external magnetic stimulation (transcranial magnetic
Young H, Sohn, Mark, Hallett
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Noninvasive electrical stimulation of the human brain first was attempted in the 1950s. In the early 1980s, the first clinical application method of transcranial electrical stimulation was developed. Investigators in the mid-1980s showed that it was possible to stimulate the nerve and the brain using external magnetic stimulation (transcranial magnetic
Young H, Sohn, Mark, Hallett
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2017
The term “motor evoked potential” (MEP) commonly refers to the action potential elicited by non-invasive (magnetic) stimulation of the motor cortex through the scalp. MEPs can be recorded using surface electromyography from all skeletal muscles and are mediated by fast-conducting cortico-motoneuronal connections projecting monosynaptically to the alpha-
Abbruzzese G., Trompetto C.
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The term “motor evoked potential” (MEP) commonly refers to the action potential elicited by non-invasive (magnetic) stimulation of the motor cortex through the scalp. MEPs can be recorded using surface electromyography from all skeletal muscles and are mediated by fast-conducting cortico-motoneuronal connections projecting monosynaptically to the alpha-
Abbruzzese G., Trompetto C.
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Journal of Neuroscience Nursing, 1984
An evoked potential is an electrical manifestation of the brain's response to an external stimulus. Evoked potential studies provide a sensitive, quantitative assessment of portions of the neurological system which may enhance clinical data but do not indicate specific diagnosis.
R T, Giubilato, J, Metcalf
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An evoked potential is an electrical manifestation of the brain's response to an external stimulus. Evoked potential studies provide a sensitive, quantitative assessment of portions of the neurological system which may enhance clinical data but do not indicate specific diagnosis.
R T, Giubilato, J, Metcalf
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