High-quality EEG interpretation, delivered remotely.
MindFlux Diagnostics provides remote EEG interpretation by epilepsy board-certified epileptologists from top U.S. academic institutions, supporting hospitals and neurology practices with timely, clinically focused reports.
We interpret neonatal, pediatric, adult, and continuous EEG studies with an emphasis on clarity, communication, and real-world inpatient decision making.
30-minute introductory call to review EEG volume, coverage needs, and workflow.
EEG interpretation services
Flexible remote coverage designed to integrate smoothly with your existing EEG workflow.
Neonatal & pediatric EEG
Age-appropriate EEG interpretation for NICU and pediatric settings.
Adult routine & continuous EEG
Routine, prolonged, and continuous EEG interpretation including ICU monitoring.
Operational support
Clear, EMR-ready reporting with defined communication pathways.
Why remote EEG matters
EEG monitoring supports timely inpatient decision-making—especially when seizures are nonconvulsive or clinically subtle.
- Finds seizures you can’t see: Many ICU seizures are nonconvulsive and would be missed without EEG.
[1–3]
Selected references
1) Herman ST, Abend NS, Bleck TP, et al. ACNS cEEG consensus statement. J Clin Neurophysiol. 2015.
2) Claassen J, et al. Electrographic seizures on cEEG in ICU patients. Neurology. 2004;62:1743–1748.
3) Jette N, et al. Nonconvulsive seizures during cEEG in critically ill children. Arch Neurol. 2006. - Captures events that appear later: A meaningful number of patients have their first electrographic seizure after >24 hours.
[2,3]
Selected references
2) Claassen J, et al. Neurology. 2004;62:1743–1748.
3) Jette N, et al. Arch Neurol. 2006. - Improves real-time decision-making: Continuous EEG helps teams confirm/rule out seizures, adjust antiseizure medications, and track evolving brain dysfunction.
[1]
Reference
1) Herman ST, Abend NS, Bleck TP, et al. ACNS cEEG consensus statement. J Clin Neurophysiol. 2015.
- Seizure burden matters: Higher electrographic seizure burden is associated with worse short-term neurologic outcomes in critically ill children.
[4]
Reference
4) Payne ET, Zhao XY, Frndova H, et al. Seizure burden and outcomes in critically ill children. Brain. 2014;137:1429–1438.
- Important in neonates and pediatrics: Neonatal electrographic seizures are associated with worse neurodevelopmental outcomes.
[5]
Reference
5) McBride MC, Laroia N, Guillet R. Neonatal electrographic seizures and neurodevelopment. Neurology. 2000;55:506–513.
- Efficient, risk-based monitoring: Seizure risk changes over time; evidence supports tailoring EEG duration based on early features and evolving risk.
[6]
Reference
6) Westover MB, et al. Seizure probability over time during EEG monitoring. Clin Neurophysiol. 2015.
- Value and cost-effectiveness: Economic analyses suggest EEG strategies can be cost-effective (and in some models cost-saving) when they improve detection and downstream decisions.
[7,8]
Selected references
7) Abend NS, et al. Cost to identify electrographic seizures in critically ill children. J Clin Neurophysiol. 2015.
8) Ney JP, et al. Economic value of rapid-response EEG. J Med Econ. 2021.
Clinical expertise
All EEG studies are interpreted exclusively by epilepsy board-certified epileptologists at top U.S. academic institutions.
Contact
For EEG coverage inquiries, please email us or schedule a brief introductory call.