When using the NE-224S Sub-dermal Straight Needle Electrode
• Do not use the NE-224S sub-dermal straight needle electrode as a
measurement electrode for the EEG or evoked potential
measurement for any longer than one hour. When measuring the
EEG or evoked potential for over one hour, use the EEG disk
electrode.
• Do not check the skin-electrode impedance when using a needle
electrode or intracranial electrode. Failure to follow this warning
injures the patient because these electrodes will be damaged by
electrolyzation inside the body.
• When measuring the patient with the implantable pacemaker, leave
the instrument (telemetry unit and access point) more than 22 cm
from the patient. Otherwise, the radio wave from the telemetry unit
or access point may interfere with the pacemaker.
• Do not delete any system file in the hard disk of the
electroencephalograph. Otherwise the system may malfunction.
• Periodically back up the EEG data files to prevent loss of data if the
hard disk or MO disk is damaged.
Operator's Manual WEE-10003.1
3. EEG/PSG MEASUREMENT
CAUTION
• Do not use a device which uses Bluetooth® wireless technology and
wireless LAN device which complies with IEEE 802.11b near the
wireless input unit at the same time. If they are used together, the
radio waves interfere with each other. This may prevent the
communication between the telemetry unit and access point by
reducing transmission speed and transmission distance.
• Do not give impact to the telemetry unit. Spike noise may be
superimposed on the waveform.
• Use the provided pochette to hold the telemetry unit, electrode
junction box and/or isolator when they are attached to the patient.
• When moving the patient, make sure that the cable connected
between the isolator and access point is disconnected. Otherwise,
the patient may fall over the cable, or the cable may be broken.
• Do not shake or swing the telemetry unit holding the cable
connected to the telemetry unit. The telemetry unit may come off and
it may injure somebody or damage surrounding instruments.
• Do not shake or swing the electrode junction box holding the cable
or EEG lead connected to the electrode junction box. The electrode
junction box may come off and it may injure somebody or damage
surrounding instruments.
• During measurement, do not change the date and time. This makes
the order of the saved event data and the time of the saved
waveforms incorrect.
NOTE
Turn off any screen saver and close all application programs before
opening the Acquisition program. Otherwise, the Acquisition
program may not function properly.
3.2Operator's Manual WEE-1000
3. EEG/PSG MEASUREMENT
Electrode Attachment/Cable Connection
WARNING
• Do not connect the Z electrode lead plug on the electrode junction
box to a ground or equipotential ground. Otherwise, leakage current
from another instrument cause electrical shock to the patient.
• Only connect a BF type instrument to the DC connector on the
telemetry unit. Otherwise, leakage current from the other instrument
causes electrical shock to the patient.
• Before disconnecting or connecting the cable from/to a connecter on
the telemetry unit, while the telemetry unit is turned on, discharge
electrostatic charge from your body. Otherwise, the telemetry unit
may malfunction due to electrostatic energy.
• When connecting the electrode junction box cable to the electrode
junction box, align the
connector and electrode junction box. Otherwise, leakage current
may cause electrical shock to the patient.
marks on the electrode junction box cable
CAUTION
Using a collodion electrode or EEG paste
• If rash, redness or itch appears on the patient skin from the use of
collodion or EEG paste, immediately remove the collodion or EEG
paste from the skin and perform medical treatment.
• Never allow collodion or acetone to get in the patient’s eyes. If
collodion or acetone accidentally gets in the eyes, immediately and
thoroughly wash eyes with clean water and perform medical
treatment immediately.
• If chemical solution is swallowed, have the person drink water and
vomit the chemical solution. Perform medical treatment immediately.
• Collodion is a volatile solvent. Both patients and medical staff must
take extreme care not to inhale collodion. When using collodion,
make sure there is adequate ventilation. If too much collodion is
inhaled, have the person lie quietly and keep warm in fresh air.
Perform medical treatment immediately.
Operator's Manual WEE-10003.3
3. EEG/PSG MEASUREMENT
EEG Waveform Acquisition
About Polysomnography
The Acquisition program acquires the EEG/PSG waveforms and can display up to
64 channels of EEG/PSG waveforms. You can save the acquired waveforms with
the patient information, annotations, amplifier settings and display settings in a
hard disk or MO disk as an EEG data file. For the operation of the Acquisition
program, refer to the operator’s manual of the electroencephalograph.
The communication between the telemetry unit and the access point can be
checked on the Acquisition screen. You can also change the configuration settings
of the telemetry unit and access point on the Acquisition screen.
Polysomnography is an examination to measure the electrical signals in the body
during sleep. Many different activities are measured during a sleep study. The
basic measurement parameters are electroencephalogram (EEG), eye movement
(EOG), muscle activity (EMG), heartbeat (ECG), oxygen saturation (SpO2) and
respiration. These measurement parameters can help determine what is going on
during sleep. In addition to the basic measurement parameters, we can find the
cause of a sleep disorder by measuring the activity which is suspected to be
causing the sleep disorder
Basic Measurement Parameters
ParameterElectrode/Sensor
EEGDisk electrode
EOGDisk electrode
ECGDisk electrode
EMG ChinDisk electrode
Respiration
Air flowTR-101A /TR-102A Respiration pickup
or Airflow sensor*
Chest/ AbdomenTR-111A/TR-112A Respiration pickup
or Effort sensor*
Periodic limb movementsPLM sensor*
SnoreDynamic snoring microphone*
SpO
2
SpO2 probe**
Sleep positionSleep position indicator*
*Pro-Tech Service Inc.
** Nonin Medical Inc., JL-101A SpO2 sensor adapter is required.
3.4Operator's Manual WEE-1000
Flowchart of Waveform
Measurement
3. EEG/PSG MEASUREMENT
1. Put the telemetry unit in the pochette and attach it to the patient.
2. Attach the EEG electrodes and sensors to the patient.
3. Connect the electrode junction box to the telemetry unit
4. Turn on the telemetry unit and access point.
5. Start the Acquisition program (New file automatically opens).
6. Select the telemetry unit and access point.
7. Enter the patient information.
8. Check skin-electrode contact impedance.
9. Start EEG/PSG measurement (recording).
10. Display and record the calibration waveforms.
11. Measure the waveforms.
12. End the measurement and close (save) the EEG data file.
13. Close the Acquisition program.
14. Review the saved EEG/PSG waveforms.
After measurement, use the Review program to review and print the waveforms.
Operator's Manual WEE-10003.5
3. EEG/PSG MEASUREMENT
Attaching the Electrodes (EEG Measurement)
Guidelines for Input Jack
Use
You must follow these guidelines to obtain correct EEG recordings.
Required Electrodes
Do not perform EEG measurement without the Z, C3, C4, A1 and A2 electrodes.
Input Jack Z
Connect the lead from the electrode (Z electrode) attached on the patient’s nasion
to input jack Z on the electrode junction box. This input jack is used to eliminate
AC interference.
The input jack Z is also used for checking electrode impedance.
Input Jacks C3 and C4
The C3 and C4 electrodes are the system reference electrodes for EEG
measurement. Input jacks C3 and C4 must be used for EEG measurement even if
C3 and C4 are not programmed in any montage.
Connect the leads from the electrodes on positions C3 and C4 to input jacks C3 and
C4, respectively.
Input Jacks A1 and A2
The A1 and A2 electrodes are the reference electrodes for skin-electrode impedance
check. Input jacks A1 and A2 in addition to Z, C3 and C4 must be used for the
electrode impedance check.
When checking electrode impedance, connect the leads from the electrodes on
positions A1 and A2 to input jacks A1 and A2, respectively.
Checking Original Electrode Potentials for All Active Electrodes
Check the original electrode potential for all active electrodes by programming a
montage with the system reference (Use the pattern VA (factory default setting) or
select the 0 V button for reference electrode on the Montage dialog box). Refer to
“Programming Patterns” in Section 4 of the electroencephalograph operator’s
manual.
The digital EEG displays the EEG waveform in each channel by subtracting two
electrode potentials selected to a montage. The subtracted result will be incorrect, if
the electrode attachment is not correct, the original electrode potential is flat, or
unstable or artifact is superimposed on the original electrode potential. Omit the
measurement result if the displayed EEG waveform is incorrect.
3.6Operator's Manual WEE-1000
3. EEG/PSG MEASUREMENT
Introduction to Electrode
Position, Derivation and
Montage
Electrode Position
There are various systems of electrode position, such as Illinois, Montreal, Aird,
Cohn, etc. Of these, the International 10-20 system, shown below, is currently the
most common. Each system has a different number of electrodes and different
electrode locations. To compensate for different sized heads, the distances between
electrodes are given as ratios.
Nasion
F
P1
1
F
7
F
3
13
3
C
T
3
11
A
1
3
15
5
P
3
T
5
7
17
O
9
F
P2
2
F
8
F
4
F
Z
19
C
Z
24
20
P
Z
1
14
4
C
4
T
4
16
6
P
4
8
O
2
10
12
A
T
6
18
2
Inion
10-20 system electrode positions
After determining the electrode position system, measure the head of the patient
and calculate the electrode positions according to the distance ratio between each
electrode position. The number of electrodes should be reduced for EEG recording
on infants and little children.
Derivation
Derivation is the electrode combination for one channel. All derivations have two
electrodes: reference and active. In monopolar derivation, one “electrode” can be
several physical electrodes connected together. There are 3 kinds of derivations.
Monopolar Derivations (Referential Derivation)
In the monopolar derivation, one electrode is common to all channels and regarded
as electrically inactive (“reference electrode”). Each amplifier has two inputs (G1
and G2). The reference electrode is connected to the G2 (+) input of the amplifier
and the active electrode is connected to the G1 (−) input.
Monopolar Derivations Using Ear Reference Electrodes:
• Normal Monopolar Derivation
Left ear for left hemispheric derivation and the right ear for right hemispheric
derivation.
• A1 + A2
Shorting both ears (in the electrode junction box).
• A1 → A2 or A1 ← A2
Only one ear.
• A1 ↔ A2
Left ear for right hemispheric and right ear for left hemispheric derivation.
Operator's Manual WEE-10003.7
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