Electroencephalography (EEG)
Electroencephalography (EEG) is performed by placing electrodes on the scalp to record the electrical activity of the brain. The test is painless and takes about 90 minutes.
If a physician wants to study brains patterns that occur during sleep, patients are asked to come for the test without sleeping the night before.
A 24-hour electroencephalography records the brain activity for 24 hours. The test is performed while patients go about their everyday activities. They wear a small tape recorder at the waist, and electrodes are applied to their scalp with a glue-like substance. The patient is given a diary and asked to monitor and record symptoms that might occur throughout the day.
EEGs are sometimes used during certain types of brain or spinal cord surgery to provide the surgeon with information about how the brain is functioning.
EEGs are performed to help diagnose different neurological conditions, the most common of which are seizure disorders, headaches, and dizziness. EEGs are also used in cases of stroke, degenerative brain disease, irreversible brain death, psychiatric illness, and even some disabilities that occur in children.







