Multimodal monitoring including early EEG improves stratification of brain injury severity after pediatric cardiac arrest
- PMID: 34237356
- PMCID: PMC8530861
- DOI: 10.1016/j.resuscitation.2021.06.020
Multimodal monitoring including early EEG improves stratification of brain injury severity after pediatric cardiac arrest
Abstract
Aims: Assessment of brain injury severity early after cardiac arrest (CA) may guide therapeutic interventions and help clinicians counsel families regarding neurologic prognosis. We aimed to determine whether adding EEG features to predictive models including clinical variables and examination signs increased the accuracy of short-term neurobehavioral outcome prediction.
Methods: This was a prospective, observational, single-center study of consecutive infants and children resuscitated from CA. Standardized EEG scoring was performed by an electroencephalographer for the initial EEG timepoint after return of spontaneous circulation (ROSC) and each 12-h segment from the time of ROSC up to 48 h. EEG Background Category was scored as: (1) normal; (2) slow-disorganized; (3) discontinuous or burst-suppression; or (4) attenuated-featureless. The primary outcome was neurobehavioral outcome at discharge from the Pediatric Intensive Care Unit. To develop the final predictive model, we compared areas under the receiver operating characteristic curves (AUROC) from models with varying combinations of Demographic/Arrest Variables, Examination Signs, and EEG Features.
Results: We evaluated 89 infants and children. Initial EEG Background Category was normal in 9 subjects (10%), slow-disorganized in 44 (49%), discontinuous or burst suppression in 22 (25%), and attenuated-featureless in 14 (16%). The final model included Demographic/Arrest Variables (witnessed status, doses of epinephrine, initial lactate after ROSC) and EEG Background Category which achieved AUROC of 0.9 for unfavorable neurobehavioral outcome and 0.83 for mortality.
Conclusions: The addition of standardized EEG Background Categories to readily available CA variables significantly improved early stratification of brain injury severity after pediatric CA.
Keywords: Cardiac arrest; EEG; Outcome; Pediatric; Seizure.
Copyright © 2021 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
Conflict of interest statement
Conflicts of interest
The authors have no conflicts of interest.
Comment in
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The next step towards a predictive model of outcomes following pediatric cardiac arrest.Resuscitation. 2021 Oct;167:398-399. doi: 10.1016/j.resuscitation.2021.08.002. Epub 2021 Aug 9. Resuscitation. 2021. PMID: 34384818 No abstract available.
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