Novel Ultra-long Term EEG Monitoring System
A Possible Enabler of BCI Technologies
Jonas Duun-Henriksen and Sirin W. Gangstad
HypoSafe A/S, Kgs. Lyngby, Denmark
1 OBJECTIVES
Various groups have recently sketched the future
within portable EEG equipment (Brunner et al.,
2015; Casson et al., 2010). They agree that small,
portable and convenient systems for instant and
continuous EEG monitoring are essential.
We therefore present a novel subcutaneous
monitoring system developed for unobtrusive,
continuous, ultra-long term EEG applications.
Evidence of high signal quality is provided for two
patients monitored continuously night and day for a
1 month period.
2 METHODS
The recording system is described previously in
(Duun-Henriksen et al., 2015; Elsborg et al., 2011)
and preliminary results based on the same dataset as
the current is presented at The 15
th
European
Congress on Clinical Neurophysiology, October
2015 (Duun-Henriksen et al., 2015).
The system consists of an implantable part and
an external part, see
Figure 1
. The implantable part of
the device consists of an insulated lead with three
embedded platinum-iridium electrodes located
30mm apart. The middle electrode is the reference to
each of the other electrodes, thus providing two
channels. The lead is fixed to the implant housing,
which contains a coil for wireless transmission of
power and brain signals to an outer device. The
outer device consists of a small shell containing a
coil and electronic components for online data
analysis. It is furthermore possible to connect a
memory unit if up to 30 days of EEG recording,
sampled at 207 Hz, should be stored. The
implantation and explantation of the subcutaneous
device is carried out under local anaesthesia and
takes approximately 15 minutes. After implantation
the electrodes do not move.
Data were collected from two healthy volunteers
for up to 45 days. The project was approved by the
regional ethical committee and the Danish Health
and Medicines Authority. All subjects have given
informed written consent before being enrolled in
the trial. The implantable device was placed with the
housing right behind the ear and the lead pointing a
little posterior to vertex. Subjects wore the system
day and night, except while taking a shower or doing
water sports.
To investigate the signal quality longitudinally,
the signal was forward and reverse filtered into
standard physiological frequency bands (δ: 0-4 Hz,
θ: 4-8 Hz, α: 8-13 Hz, β
low
: 13-20 Hz, and β
high
: 20-
30 Hz). Filters were 10
th
order IIR bandpass filters.
Then the average power of each frequency band in
10 seconds, non-overlapping windows were
computed. The average power values were then
further split into 30 minute intervals, from which the
20
th
percentile power for each frequency band were
extracted.
For the statistical analysis, a linear model was
fitted for each frequency band with time, day/night
and patient as independent variables. The band
power was log-transformed prior to the modelling.
Figure 1: Experimental setup. (1A) Outer device for power
and signal transmission to and from the implantable part.
(1B) External memory unit to store long-term EEG
recordings. (3) Implantable part with lead and implant
housing.
Duun-Henriksen, J. and Gangstad, S..
Novel Ultra-long Term EEG Monitoring System - {{\}it A Possible Enabler of BCI Technologies}.
Copyright
c
2015 by SCITEPRESS Science and Technology Publications, Lda. All rights reserved
Figure 2: 20
th
percentile power in different frequency bands during a 45 days period for subject 1. The power does not seem
to change over time for neither day nor night recordings.
Figure 3: Same as figure 2 but for subject 2. The same tendencies regarding differences in night and day as well as no trend
over time are seen for both subjects.
3 RESULTS
Figure 2 and Figure 3 show the 20th percentile of the
average power in the five standard physiological
frequency bands as described in Methods.
The figures illustrate a difference between night and
day recordings in the θ, β
low, and βhigh frequency
bands. This is also validated in the statistical
analysis with p-values<0.001. Although a clear
difference in the δ-band is not as easily seen in the
figures, the statistical analysis showed a significant
difference in this band too.
Looking at the data points as a function of time,
there is no visual trend that implies that the
distribution should change over time. For both
subjects, the variance in the θ-band is higher during
night recordings, but both the mean and the standard
deviation are consistent over time.
4 DISCUSSION
4.1 Data Quality
In a previous publication we showed that the EEG
data quality of subcutaneous measurements made 10
days after implantation of the implantable device is
comparable to the data quality of standard scalp
EEG (Duun-Henriksen et al., 2015). The present
analysis has shown that the 20
th percentile of the
average power in the five standard frequency bands
do not change over a time course of ~ 1 month. This
indicates that the good data quality documented ten
days after implantation can be expected throughout
the ultra-long term, subcutaneous EEG
measurement.
4.1.1 20th Percentile
The use of the 20th percentile as a measure of the
approximate power during a 30 min long period has
some advantages as well as pitfalls. The advantage is
that especially during day, a decent amount of
artefacts are seen. Extracting the 20
th percentile
eliminates those artefacts. Investigating the amount
of artefacts in data was out of the scope of this
extended abstract, but the number is well above the
20
th percentile. The pitfall is that data are not
stationary, thus eliminating states that are evident for
less than 20% of the time. Such a state is for
example the deep sleep stage 3 with pronounced
high amplitudes of delta sleep. As this state only
constitutes approximately 15% of the time for
normal adults during sleep, this will not be included
in the 20
th percentile. This is probably also the
reason that the power in the delta-band is actually
higher during day recordings than night recordings
in this comparison.
4.1.2 Beta-power Declines during Night
It was seen that for both βlow, and βhigh frequency
bands the power was significantly lower during
night recordings. Whether this is due to less β-
activity during the night or simply less muscle
activity during the day is impossible to say with the
current analysis. Further investigation is needed.
4.2 The Use of the Device for BCI
We believe that the results support the statement that
the novel device is feasible for ultra-long term EEG
monitor that can be used for applications within BCI
technologies where continuous and instantaneous
measurements of the EEG is needed.
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
We would like to thank The Danish Council for
Strategic Research for funding of research leading to
this paper.
DECLARATION OF INTEREST
Jonas Duun-Henriksen and Sirin W. Gangstad are
full time employed at Hypo-Safe A/S developing
and producing devices for unobtrusive subcutaneous
EEG monitoring.
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