Electrocorticography (ECoG) is a specialized diagnostic procedure that provides doctors with detailed information about brain electrical activity by placing electrodes directly on the brain’s surface. Understanding when this test is needed and what it involves can help patients and their families prepare for this important step in diagnosis and treatment.
Introduction: Who Should Undergo Electrocorticography
Electrocorticography, commonly known as ECoG, is a medical procedure that involves recording electrical activity directly from the surface of the brain. Unlike standard electroencephalography (EEG) which records brain activity through the skull using electrodes placed on the scalp, ECoG uses electrodes placed directly on the exposed brain tissue during surgery. This makes it what doctors call an invasive procedure, meaning it requires surgical access to the brain.[1]
Most people who undergo electrocorticography have epilepsy that does not respond well to medications. When someone experiences seizures that cannot be controlled by drugs, doctors need to find exactly where in the brain these seizures start. This information is crucial because if the seizure-causing area can be identified and safely removed, the person may become seizure-free or have fewer seizures. However, before any brain tissue is removed, doctors must be absolutely certain about which part of the brain is causing the problem and which parts need to be protected because they control important functions like speech or movement.[2]
Electrocorticography is typically considered when standard non-invasive tests like magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and regular EEG recordings cannot precisely locate where seizures are coming from. This happens in cases where the seizure focus is not clear from outside measurements, or when the suspected area is in a complex location that requires more detailed mapping. The procedure is especially important when the seizure-causing area might be near regions of the brain that control critical functions, because doctors need to map these areas carefully to avoid damaging them during surgery.[4]
It is advisable to seek evaluation for ECoG when a neurologist recommends it after thorough testing with conventional methods has not provided enough information. The decision to proceed with this test is never taken lightly, as it requires surgery to access the brain. The treating neurologist will typically obtain MRI scans and prolonged EEG monitoring first to determine where seizures are coming from before recommending the more invasive ECoG procedure.[2]
Diagnostic Methods: How Electrocorticography Works
The process of electrocorticography begins with careful surgical planning. Before the actual procedure, doctors use brain imaging techniques such as MRI or CT scans to plan exactly where the electrodes should be placed. This planning phase is essential to ensure the electrodes are positioned in the most informative locations while minimizing surgical risk.[13]
The ECoG procedure itself requires a craniotomy, which is a surgical operation where part of the skull bone is temporarily removed to expose the brain’s surface. This surgery typically lasts several hours and is most commonly performed under general anesthesia, meaning the patient is completely asleep and feels nothing during the operation. In some special cases, local anesthesia may be used if doctors need the patient to be awake and able to interact during the procedure, particularly when testing for speech or other critical functions.[2]
Once the brain is exposed, specialized electrodes are placed directly on its surface. These electrodes come in different configurations depending on what information doctors need. Grid electrodes are flat arrays containing multiple electrode contacts arranged in a rectangular pattern, useful for covering larger areas of the brain surface. Strip electrodes are narrower and contain fewer electrodes in a single row, often used for recording from specific grooves in the brain or between the two brain hemispheres. Depth electrodes are thin probes that can be inserted into deeper brain structures that cannot be reached by surface electrodes.[13]
The electrodes used in ECoG are typically made of platinum or platinum-iridium, metals that conduct electricity well and are safe for contact with brain tissue. The most common electrode discs are about 4 millimeters in diameter, though sizes can vary depending on the specific clinical need. These electrodes are much larger than the tiny microelectrodes used in research, but they provide an excellent balance between safety and the quality of information they can record.[4]
After the electrodes are placed on the brain, their connecting wires are tunneled under the scalp and exit through a small opening in the skin near the surgical incision. The wires are then coiled and secured to prevent accidental pulling or displacement. The bone that was removed is usually put back in place and secured with metal plates or clamps, and the scalp is closed with sutures. Care is taken not to trap or damage the electrode wires during closure.[20]
Once the surgery is complete, the patient is moved to a hospital room where monitoring begins. The electrodes remain in place for three to seven days on average, though some patients may need longer monitoring if seizures do not occur during that time. During this period, the electrodes continuously record electrical activity from the brain surface. The signals are amplified and sent to a computer system that displays the brain’s electrical patterns in real-time.[2]
The electrical signals recorded by ECoG represent the combined activity of large groups of brain cells, specifically postsynaptic potentials from cells called pyramidal neurons. These electrical signals must travel through several layers of brain tissue and protective membranes before reaching the recording electrodes. However, because the electrodes are placed directly on the brain rather than outside the skull, the signals are much clearer and more detailed than what can be recorded with scalp EEG. The skull acts as a poor conductor of electricity, which is why ECoG provides much better spatial resolution than regular EEG.[1]
One of the key advantages of ECoG is its excellent temporal and spatial resolution. Temporal resolution refers to how precisely the system can capture changes over time, and ECoG can detect events happening as quickly as approximately 5 milliseconds apart. Spatial resolution refers to how precisely the system can determine where activity is coming from, and ECoG can distinguish activity from areas as small as 1 to 100 micrometers, depending on the electrode configuration used.[1]
During the monitoring period, medical staff carefully observe the patient and may use various techniques to encourage seizures to occur so they can be recorded. This might include reducing seizure medications under controlled conditions, using flashing lights, or limiting sleep. While this might sound concerning, it is done safely in a hospital setting where medical help is immediately available if needed. The goal is to capture multiple seizures on the ECoG recording to confirm where they start and how they spread.[2]
Alongside the electrical recordings, video cameras continuously record the patient’s behavior. This combination of brain electrical activity and visual observation is crucial because it allows doctors to correlate what they see happening during a seizure with the electrical patterns in the brain. This helps distinguish true seizures from other events and provides additional information about which brain areas are involved.[7]
The recorded data serves multiple purposes. First, it creates a detailed map of where seizures begin and how they spread across the brain surface. Second, doctors can use electrical stimulation through the same electrodes to map important functional areas of the brain. By delivering small, carefully controlled electrical currents through the electrodes, doctors can temporarily activate or interfere with specific brain regions. This allows them to identify areas responsible for movement, sensation, speech, and other critical functions that must be avoided during any surgical removal of brain tissue.[1]
Research has shown that the area of brain tissue that contributes to the ECoG signal is surprisingly local, with a diameter of approximately 3 millimeters. This means that each electrode primarily records activity from the brain tissue directly beneath it and its immediate surroundings, rather than from distant brain regions. This localized nature makes ECoG particularly valuable for precisely identifying seizure-causing tissue.[3]
When the monitoring period is complete and doctors have gathered sufficient information, the electrodes must be removed. This requires another trip to the operating room. The electrode wires are carefully withdrawn through the scalp opening where they were originally tunneled out. If enough information has been obtained to locate the seizure focus, doctors may proceed to remove the problematic brain tissue during the same operation. In other cases, the electrode removal is a separate, shorter procedure.[2]
Diagnostics for Clinical Trial Qualification
Electrocorticography plays an important role in assessing patients for clinical trials, particularly those testing new treatments for epilepsy. The ability of ECoG to precisely identify where seizures start and to record their frequency makes it valuable for determining whether patients meet the specific criteria required to participate in research studies.[2]
One key application of ECoG in clinical trial settings involves establishing accurate baseline seizure frequency. In traditional epilepsy treatment trials, researchers rely on patients or their caregivers to report when seizures occur. However, studies have shown that many seizures, particularly brief or subtle ones, go unnoticed and unreported. This can lead to an artificially low baseline seizure count, which affects how researchers measure whether a treatment is working. ECoG recordings can detect all seizures, including those that would be missed by patients, providing a more accurate picture of true seizure frequency.[10]
Research examining the Responsive Neurostimulation System, a device that uses ECoG to detect and treat seizures, found significant differences when comparing self-reported seizure frequencies to ECoG-recorded frequencies. Patients using ECoG-based frequency measurements showed much greater improvement than when traditional self-reported baselines were used. This demonstrates the value of ECoG-derived data in accurately assessing treatment outcomes.[12]
Studies investigating predictive factors for treatment success have also utilized ECoG data. Researchers have identified specific electrical patterns and characteristics in ECoG recordings that may help predict which patients are most likely to benefit from particular treatments. These biomarkers – measurable indicators of disease state or treatment response – could help doctors make more informed decisions about which treatments to recommend for individual patients.[2]
For clinical trials testing surgical treatments for epilepsy, ECoG serves as both a diagnostic tool and an outcome measure. It helps identify appropriate candidates by confirming the location and nature of their seizures, and it can be used during and after treatment to assess whether the intervention successfully eliminated or reduced seizure activity. This dual role makes ECoG particularly valuable in the development and testing of new surgical and device-based therapies.[11]


