scholarly journals P.061 Reliability of EEG reactivity in assessement of comatose patients under standardized protocol

Author(s):  
M AlKhateeb ◽  
L Norton ◽  
T Gofton ◽  
E AlThenayan ◽  
D Debicki

Background: Electroencephalography (EEG) is a routine clinical tool that is used to evaluate thalamocortical function in comatose patients. The presence or absence of reactivity in background EEG patterns to afferent stimuli is believed to be an important indicator of clinical outcome. At present, there are no guidelines or standardized testing protocols for the assessment of EEG reactivity in critically ill patients. Moreover, the inter-rater reliability of subjectively identifying presence or absence of reactivity is known to be poor. Methods: Here we report the implementation of a clinical protocol formalizing the use of afferent stimuli – name-calling, clapping, nasal tickle, central painful stimuli and tracheal suction – administered during the routine EEG evaluation of behaviourally unresponsive patients in the critical care units at London Health Sciences Centre. EEGs were evaluated by qualified electroencephalographers. Results: This retrospective observational study of consecutive patients describes the inter-rater reliability of detecting presence or absence of EEG reactivity since implementation of the clinical protocol. Moreover it evaluates the relationship between EEG reactivity and clinical outcome to determine its reliability as a prognostic tool. Conclusions: The implementation of clinical protocols to standardize testing parameters may improve the ability to provide a reliable neurologic prognosis for critically ill patients in a comatose and behaviourally unresponsive state.

Critical Care ◽  
2010 ◽  
Vol 14 (2) ◽  
pp. R64 ◽  
Author(s):  
Michael Fischer ◽  
Stephan Rüegg ◽  
Adam Czaplinski ◽  
Monika Strohmeier ◽  
Angelika Lehmann ◽  
...  

2019 ◽  
Vol 33 ◽  
pp. 42-46
Author(s):  
Ennaliza Salazar ◽  
Palash Ghosh ◽  
Victor Tan ◽  
Tamara Pang ◽  
Bee Yen Poh ◽  
...  

2016 ◽  
Vol 2016 ◽  
pp. 1-13 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mechteld A. R. Vermeulen ◽  
Saskia J. H. Brinkmann ◽  
Nikki Buijs ◽  
Albertus Beishuizen ◽  
Pierre M. Bet ◽  
...  

Glutamine supplementation in specific groups of critically ill patients results in favourable clinical outcome. Enhancement of citrulline and arginine synthesis by glutamine could serve as a potential mechanism. However, while receiving optimal enteral nutrition, uptake and enteral metabolism of glutamine in critically ill patients remain unknown. Therefore we investigated the effect of a therapeutically relevant dose of L-glutamine on synthesis of L-citrulline and subsequent L-arginine in this group. Ten versus ten critically ill patients receiving full enteral nutrition, or isocaloric isonitrogenous enteral nutrition including 0.5 g/kg L-alanyl-L-glutamine, were studied using stable isotopes. A cross-over design using intravenous and enteral tracers enabled splanchnic extraction (SE) calculations. Endogenous rate of appearance and SE of glutamine citrulline and arginine was not different (SE controls versus alanyl-glutamine: glutamine 48 and 48%, citrulline 33 versus 45%, and arginine 45 versus 42%). Turnover from glutamine to citrulline and arginine was not higher in glutamine-administered patients. In critically ill nonseptic patients receiving adequate nutrition and a relevant dose of glutamine there was no extra citrulline or arginine synthesis and glutamine SE was not increased. This suggests that for arginine synthesis enhancement there is no need for an additional dose of glutamine when this population is adequately fed. This trial is registered withNTR2285.


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