Single electroencephalographic patterns as specific and time-dependent indicators of good and poor outcome after cardiac arrest

被引:63
|
作者
Spalletti, M. [1 ]
Carrai, R. [1 ,2 ]
Scarpino, M. [1 ,2 ]
Cossu, C. [1 ]
Ammannati, A. [1 ]
Ciapetti, M. [3 ]
Buoninsegni, L. Tadini [3 ]
Peris, A. [3 ]
Valente, S. [4 ]
Grippo, A. [1 ,2 ]
Amantini, A. [1 ,2 ]
机构
[1] Azienda Osped Univ Careggi, SODc Neurofisiopatol, DAI Neuromuscoloscheletr & Organi Senso, I-50134 Florence, Italy
[2] Fdn Don Gnocchi IRCCS Polo Toscana, UO Riabilitaz Neurol, Florence, Italy
[3] Azienda Osped Univ Careggi, SODc Cure Intens Trauma & Supporti Extracorporei, DAI Neuromuscoloscheletr & Organi Senso, I-50134 Florence, Italy
[4] Azienda Osped Univ Careggi, SODc Cardiol Intens Integrata, DAI Cardiotoracovasc, I-50134 Florence, Italy
关键词
Cardiac arrest; Postanoxic coma; Coma; Prognostication; EEG; EEG background activity; CARE EEG TERMINOLOGY; THERAPEUTIC HYPOTHERMIA; POSTANOXIC COMA; ALPHA-COMA; PROGNOSTIC-SIGNIFICANCE; RESUSCITATION COUNCIL; PREDICTION; SURVIVORS; SOCIETY;
D O I
10.1016/j.clinph.2016.04.008
中图分类号
R74 [神经病学与精神病学];
学科分类号
摘要
Objective: To evaluate the prognostic value of single EEG patterns recorded at various time-frames in postanoxic comatose patients. Methods: This retrospective study included 30-min EEGs, classified according to the definitions of continuity of background activity given by the American Clinical Neurophysiology Society. Isoelectric pattern was distinguished from other suppressed activities. Epileptiform patterns were considered separately. Outcome was dichotomised based on recovery of consciousness as good (Glasgow Outcome Scale [GOS] 3-5) or poor (GOS 1-2). Results: We analysed 211 EEGs, categorised according to time since cardiac arrest (within 12 h and around 24, 48 and 72 h). In each time-frame we observed at least one EEG pattern which was 100% specific to poor or good outcome: at 12 h continuous and nearly continuous patterns predicted good outcome and isoelectric pattern poor outcome; at 24 h isoelectric and burst-suppression predicted poor outcome; at 48 and 72 h isoelectric, burst-suppression and suppression (2-10 lV) patterns predicted poor outcome. Conclusions: The prognostic value of single EEG patterns, defined according to continuity and voltage of background activity, changes until 48-72 h after cardiac arrest and in each time-frame there is at least one pattern which accurately predicts good or poor outcome. Significance: Standard EEG can provide time-dependent reliable indicators of good and poor outcome throughout the first 48-72 h after cardiac arrest. (C) 2016 Published by Elsevier Ireland Ltd on behalf of International Federation of Clinical Neurophy-siology.
引用
收藏
页码:2610 / 2617
页数:8
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Neurophysiology for predicting good and poor neurological outcome at 12 and 72 h after cardiac arrest: The ProNeCA multicentre prospective study
    Scarpino, Maenia
    Carrai, Riccardo
    Lolli, Francesco
    Lanzo, Giovanni
    Spalletti, Maddalena
    Valzania, Franco
    Lombardi, Maria
    Audenino, Daniela
    Contardi, Sara
    Celani, Maria Grazia
    Marrelli, Alfonso
    Mecarelli, Oriano
    Minardi, Chiara
    Minicucci, Fabio
    Politini, Lucia
    Vitelli, Eugenio
    Peris, Adriano
    Amantini, Aldo
    Sandroni, Claudio
    Grippo, Antonello
    Bandinelli, Chiara
    Bernardo, Pasquale
    Cantisani, Teresa Anna
    Ciuffini, Roberta
    Davi, Leonardo
    Lombardi, Maria
    Marudi, Andrea
    Moretti, Marco
    Olivo, Giuseppe
    Rikani, Klaudio
    Sabadini, Rossella
    Zilioli, Angelo
    RESUSCITATION, 2020, 147 : 95 - 103
  • [2] Electroencephalography Predicts Poor and Good Outcomes After Cardiac Arrest: A Two-Center Study
    Rossetti, Andrea O.
    Quiroga, Diego F. Tovar
    Juan, Elsa
    Novy, Jan
    White, Roger D.
    Ben-Hamouda, Nawfel
    Britton, Jeffrey W.
    Oddo, Mauro
    Rabinstein, Alejandro A.
    CRITICAL CARE MEDICINE, 2017, 45 (07) : E674 - E682
  • [3] Quantitative EEG reactivity induced by electrical stimulation predicts good outcome in comatose patients after cardiac arrest
    Liu, Gang
    Wang, Yuan
    Tian, Fei
    Chen, Weibi
    Cui, Lili
    Jiang, Mengdi
    Zhang, Yan
    Gao, Keming
    Su, Yingying
    Wang, Hongxing
    ANNALS OF INTENSIVE CARE, 2024, 14 (01):
  • [4] Performance of a guideline-recommended algorithm for prognostication of poor neurological outcome after cardiac arrest
    Moseby-Knappe, Marion
    Westhal, Erik
    Backman, Sofia
    Mattsson-Carlgren, Niklas
    Dragancea, Irina
    Lybeck, Anna
    Friberg, Hans
    Stammet, Pascal
    Lilja, Gisela
    Horn, Janneke
    Kjaergaard, Jesper
    Rylander, Christian
    Hassager, Christian
    Ullen, Susann
    Nielsen, Niklas
    Cronberg, Tobias
    INTENSIVE CARE MEDICINE, 2020, 46 (10) : 1852 - 1862
  • [5] EEG for good outcome prediction after cardiac arrest: A multicentre cohort study
    Turella, S.
    Dankiewicz, J.
    Ben-Hamouda, N.
    Nilsen, Kb
    During, J.
    Endisch, C.
    Engstrom, M.
    Flugel, D.
    Gaspard, N.
    Grejs, A. M.
    Haenggi, M.
    Haffey, S.
    Imbach, L.
    Johnsen, B.
    Kemlink, D.
    Leithner, C.
    Legriel, S.
    Lindehammar, H.
    Mazzon, G.
    Nielsen, N.
    Peyre, A.
    Stanford, B. Ribalta
    Roman-Pognuz, E.
    Rossetti, A. O.
    Schrag, C.
    Valerianova, A.
    Wendel-Garcia, P.
    Zubler, F.
    Cronberg, T.
    Westhall, E.
    RESUSCITATION, 2024, 202
  • [6] Personalized neuron-specific enolase level based on EEG pattern for prediction of poor outcome after cardiac arrest
    Pelle, Juliette
    Pruvost-Robieux, Estelle
    Dumas, Florence
    Ginguay, Antonin
    Charpentier, Julien
    Vigneron, Clara
    Pene, Frederic
    Mira, Jean Paul
    Cariou, Alain
    Benghanem, Sarah
    ANNALS OF INTENSIVE CARE, 2025, 15 (01):
  • [7] Stimulus-induced EEG-patterns and outcome after cardiac arrest
    Broman, N. Jaffer
    Backman, S.
    Westhall, E.
    CLINICAL NEUROPHYSIOLOGY PRACTICE, 2021, 6 : 219 - 224
  • [8] Increased Fibrinolysis as a Specific Marker of Poor Outcome After Cardiac Arrest
    Buchtele, Nina
    Schoergenhofer, Christian
    Spiel, Alexander O.
    Jilma, Bernd
    Schwameis, Michael
    CRITICAL CARE MEDICINE, 2018, 46 (10) : E995 - E1001
  • [9] Recorded time periods of bispectral index values equal to zero predict neurological outcome after out-of-hospital cardiac arrest
    Eertmans, Ward
    Genbrugge, Cornelia
    Haesevoets, Gilles
    Dens, Jo
    Boer, Willem
    Jans, Frank
    De Deyne, Cathy
    CRITICAL CARE, 2017, 21
  • [10] SSEP amplitude accurately predicts both good and poor neurological outcome early after cardiac arrest; a post-hoc analysis of the ProNeCA multicentre study
    Scarpino, Maenia
    Lolli, Francesco
    Lanzo, Giovanni
    Carrai, Riccardo
    Spalletti, Maddalena
    Valzania, Franco
    Lombardi, Maria
    Audenino, Daniela
    Contardi, Sara
    Celani, Maria Grazia
    Marrelli, Alfonso
    Mecarelli, Oriano
    Minardi, Chiara
    Minicucci, Fabio
    Politini, Lucia
    Vitelli, Eugenio
    Peris, Adriano
    Amantini, Aldo
    Grippo, Antonello
    Sandroni, Claudio
    RESUSCITATION, 2021, 163 : 162 - 171