Were you on psych medications or other meds that interfere with brain function during the test?
QEEG is measuring what? It measures electrical activity. It doesn't measure normal brain function. Interpretation of the recorded brain waves is not a science.
What was the duration and location of the test? Where you in a controlled, safe setting for a short amount of time? Or did you wear the electrodes as a portable monitor for 24 hours a day for at least a week as you performed your daily routine?
Did you have a baseline reading to compare the test with . . . a before and after? Or is the analysis being compared to someone else's brain waves?
Was the equipment faulty? Were the electodes placed properly? Did the person conducting the test know how to obtain accurate brain frequency data? (It's not easy.)
Is qEEG reliable? There is no standardized procedures in measuring the waves.
According to this eMedicine
article . . . "EEG may be normal or minimally disturbed in a number of patients in the initial stages of Alzheimer disease." I haven't read much about qEEG, but if it doesn't detect all cases of Alzheimer's (advanced dementia), then qEEG is not a reliable test.
If you believe your test measured what it was supposed to measure, then shouldn't this be good news? You are on your way to recovery.
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