Publication date: Available online 5 July 2018
Source:Clinical Neurophysiology
Author(s): B. Balança, F. Dailler, S. Boulogne, T. Ritzenthaler, F. Gobert, S. Rheims, N. Andre-Obadia
ObjectiveDelayed cerebral ischemia (DCI) is the most important and preventable morbidity cause after subarachnoid hemorrhage (SAH). Therefore, DCI early detection is a major challenge. Yet, neurological examination can be unreliable in poor grade SAH patients. EEG provides information from most superficial cortical area, with ischemia-related changes. This study aims at defining an alpha-theta/delta (AT/D) ratio decrease thresholds to detect DCI.MethodsWe used EEG with a montage matching vascular territories (right and left anterior central and posterior) and compared them to follow-up brain imaging.Results15 SAH patients (Fischer≥3, World Federation of Neurological Surgeons scale ≥4, 9 DCI) were monitored during 6.4 [4-8] days (min=2d, max=13d). AT/D changes could follow three different patterns: (1) prolonged or (2) transient decrease and (3) no decrease or progressive increase. A regional 30% decrease outlasting 3.7h reached 100% sensitivity and 88.9% specificity to detect DCI. Only 22.6% were in a zone of uncertain diagnosis (3.7-8.04h). These prolonged decreases, with a loss of transient changes, started in cortical areas evolving toward DCI, and preceded intracranial changes when available.ConclusionAlthough this study has a small sample size, prolonged AT/D decrease seems to be a reliable biomarker of DCI.SignificancecEEG changes are likely to precede cerebral infarction and could be useful at the bedside to detect DCI before irreversible damage.
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Medicine by Alexandros G. Sfakianakis,Anapafseos 5 Agios Nikolaos 72100 Crete Greece,00302841026182,00306932607174,alsfakia@gmail.com,
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