Difference between revisions of "Normal slowing during hyperventilation"
From EEGpedia
(Created page with "'''During hyperventilation:''' * Bilateral synchronic delta activity * Most prominent in the frontal area * Generally in persons up to 30 years old * Disappears after around 3...") |
|||
(4 intermediate revisions by the same user not shown) | |||
Line 10: | Line 10: | ||
* Sometimes the alpha rhythm becomes more prominent during hyperventilation, probably due to a relaxing effect of hyperventilation | * Sometimes the alpha rhythm becomes more prominent during hyperventilation, probably due to a relaxing effect of hyperventilation | ||
* Sometimes the responsiveness decreases during hyperventilation, this altered responsiveness during hyperventilation-induced EEG slowing is a non-epileptic phenomenon in healthy children. <ref>Epstein et al, Altered responsiveness during hyperventilation-induced EEG slowing: a non-epileptic phenomenon in normal children, epilepsia, 1994 Nov-Dec;35(6):1204-7.</ref> | * Sometimes the responsiveness decreases during hyperventilation, this altered responsiveness during hyperventilation-induced EEG slowing is a non-epileptic phenomenon in healthy children. <ref>Epstein et al, Altered responsiveness during hyperventilation-induced EEG slowing: a non-epileptic phenomenon in normal children, epilepsia, 1994 Nov-Dec;35(6):1204-7.</ref> | ||
+ | |||
+ | |||
+ | ---- | ||
+ | '''''Bilateral synchronic delta activity in the frontal area during hyperventilation (source)''''' | ||
+ | [[File: Hyperventilation_slowing_e.png|border|1200px]] | ||
+ | ---- | ||
'''Notes''' | '''Notes''' | ||
<references/> | <references/> |
Latest revision as of 14:40, 22 February 2017
During hyperventilation:
- Bilateral synchronic delta activity
- Most prominent in the frontal area
- Generally in persons up to 30 years old
- Disappears after around 30 seconds after hyperventilation was stopped
- Prolonged slowing during hyperventilation has no pathologic meaning (sometimes is hypoglycemia the cause)
- The lack of this response has no pathologic meaning
- OIRDA (occipital intermittent rhythmic delta activity) during hyperventilation is normal in children, however not in adults
- Sometimes the alpha rhythm becomes more prominent during hyperventilation, probably due to a relaxing effect of hyperventilation
- Sometimes the responsiveness decreases during hyperventilation, this altered responsiveness during hyperventilation-induced EEG slowing is a non-epileptic phenomenon in healthy children. [1]
Bilateral synchronic delta activity in the frontal area during hyperventilation (source)
Notes
- ↑ Epstein et al, Altered responsiveness during hyperventilation-induced EEG slowing: a non-epileptic phenomenon in normal children, epilepsia, 1994 Nov-Dec;35(6):1204-7.