EEG IN WHIPLASH - A REAPPRAISAL
- 1 January 1987
- journal article
- research article
- Vol. 18 (1) , 41-45
Abstract
Sixty-eight patients with symptomatic cervical whiplash injuries, who did not receive head trauma, had standard electroencephalograms performed with a time span of 1 day to 2 years after the occurrence of the accident. Minimal EEG abnormalities were found in a small number of patients. Plain x-rays, computerized tomography or radionuclide brain scans failed to demonstrate associated structural abnormalities. Twenty-five of the group had 24-hour EEG cassette recordings; 15 of the latter reported specific symptoms of their post-traumatic syndrome during the test but no abnormal EEG correlates were established. Sixteen patients had long-term follow-up studies and no example was encountered of early or late onset post-traumatic epilepsy. These findings contradict previous reports of the greater incidence and severity of EEG abnormalities in patients that have sustained whiplash neck injuries in isolation (no head trauma).This publication has 7 references indexed in Scilit:
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