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Review
. 2001 Jul-Aug;35(4):667-79.

[The importance of brain stem evoked potentials in the diagnosis of neurosurgical patients]

[Article in Polish]
Affiliations
  • PMID: 11783409
Review

[The importance of brain stem evoked potentials in the diagnosis of neurosurgical patients]

[Article in Polish]
M Rogowski et al. Neurol Neurochir Pol. 2001 Jul-Aug.

Abstract

The technique of Brainstem Electric Response Audiometry (BERA) is a non-invasive electrophysiologic method used in comatose patients for localization of areas of neuronal and synaptic dysfunction not evident in clinical evaluation. This test has a diagnostic and prognostic value in detection of abnormalities and evaluation of comatose head-injured patients at a reversible clinical stage. In contrast to most clinical signs, brainstem auditory evoked potentials are independent of levels of consciousness, analgesics, sedatives. This test is aetiologically non-specific and must be carefully integrated into the clinical situation. Generators of brainstem auditory evoked potentials are located in the auditory nerve (waves I and II) and brainstem (waves III-V). Patients in acute posttraumatic coma are assessed by means of Glasgow Coma Score (GCS), which is reliable in forecasting a favourable outcome. Patients with a score 8 points have an unfavourable outcome in 16%. Brainstem auditory evoked potentials are reliable predictors of unfavourable outcome. Subsequent brainstem auditory evoked potential testing provides relevant prognostic information, since improvement of graded brainstem auditory evoked potentials indicates a favourable outcome. Progressive deterioration of brainstem auditory evoked potentials indicates irreversible damage and is associated with unfavourable outcome, whereas singular abnormal evoked potentials may result from reversible neuronal dysfunction. The absence of waves III-V associated with the end EEG activity is the proof of brain death. Serial BERA monitoring has been used to evaluate progressive clinical syndromes, such as "uncal herniation" and evolving brain death. The use of serial BERA recordings appeared to improve the outcome predictions in comparison with single BERA tests. A combination of brainstem auditory evoked potentials, somatosensory and visual evoked potentials (multimodality evoked potentials-MEP) provides more information for management of a patient than a single evoked potential modality. The main goal to use BERA is early detection of secondary deterioration in comatose patients suffering from intracranial lesions. The results of brainstem auditory evoked potentials and clinical examination of patients obtained within the acute phase after head injury may indicate increased intracranial pressure (ICP) and incipient transtentorial herniation but do not always predict outcome (GOS). The outcome can be better evaluated later, 3-6 days after head injury. In summary, BERA is a non-invasive, safe and objective method of evaluating patients after severe head injury and adds valuable information for assessment of their outcome.

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