Abstract
Current American Clinical Neurophysiology Society guidelines require a minimum of 20 minutes of artifact-free EEG recording; however, the optimum duration for routine EEGs is not established. Our hypothesis was that an EEG recording of 40 minutes’ duration would yield more information than a 20-minute EEG in capturing epileptiform abnormalities and in obtaining sleep. We retrospectively studied 150 consecutive EEGs of 40 minutes’ duration performed at St Christopher’s Hospital for Children. Although the majority (89%) of interictal EEG abnormalities can be identified within the first 20 minutes of a routine EEG, extending the time of a routine EEG increases the yield significantly by identifying an additional 11% of abnormal studies (
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