Shchekut'ev G A, Koptelov Iu M
Zh Vyssh Nerv Deiat Im I P Pavlova. 1983 May-Jun;33(3):426-33.
Evoked potentials (EPs) to light were studied in groups of patients with tumours of basal-diencephalic localization (24 patients) and at the brain-stem level (24 patients), in comparison with 11 normal subjects. In the first group, a decrease of amplitude and increase of response duration were found in the frontal cortical areas, with simultaneous reduction of intrahemispheric differences due to decrease of low-frequency components in the EP spectra by amplitude in fronto-central parts, and of alpha- and beta-frequencies in the occipital parts of the hemispheres. EP changes resulting from brain-stem tumors were more expressed than in the case of cerebellar tumors. In patients with foci causing a pronounced irritation of the brain-stem, a decrease in responses amplitude was observed accompanied by an amplitude lowering of delta- and theta-frequencies in EPs-spectra in the frontal, central and temporal leads, with no changes in the occipital leads. The obtained data testify to functional inequivalence and independence of different EP frequency components suggesting that the methods of studying the EP frequency structure are informative and efficient.