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Diagnostic Value of Electroencephalography with Ten Electrodes in Critically Ill Patients

BACKGROUND: In critical care settings, electroencephalography (EEG) with reduced number of electrodes (reduced montage EEG, rm-EEG) might be a timely alternative to the conventional full montage EEG (fm-EEG). However, past studies have reported variable accuracies for detecting seizures using rm-EEG...

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Autores principales: Westover, M. Brandon, Gururangan, Kapil, Markert, Matthew S., Blond, Benjamin N., Lai, Saien, Benard, Shawna, Bickel, Stephan, Hirsch, Lawrence J., Parvizi, Josef
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Springer US 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7416437/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32034656
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s12028-019-00911-4
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author Westover, M. Brandon
Gururangan, Kapil
Markert, Matthew S.
Blond, Benjamin N.
Lai, Saien
Benard, Shawna
Bickel, Stephan
Hirsch, Lawrence J.
Parvizi, Josef
author_facet Westover, M. Brandon
Gururangan, Kapil
Markert, Matthew S.
Blond, Benjamin N.
Lai, Saien
Benard, Shawna
Bickel, Stephan
Hirsch, Lawrence J.
Parvizi, Josef
author_sort Westover, M. Brandon
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: In critical care settings, electroencephalography (EEG) with reduced number of electrodes (reduced montage EEG, rm-EEG) might be a timely alternative to the conventional full montage EEG (fm-EEG). However, past studies have reported variable accuracies for detecting seizures using rm-EEG. We hypothesized that the past studies did not distinguish between differences in sensitivity from differences in classification of EEG patterns by different readers. The goal of the present study was to revisit the diagnostic value of rm-EEG when confounding issues are accounted for. METHODS: We retrospectively collected 212 adult EEGs recorded at Massachusetts General Hospital and reviewed by two epileptologists with access to clinical, trending, and video information. In Phase I of the study, we re-configured the first 4 h of the EEGs in lateral circumferential montage with ten electrodes and asked new readers to interpret the EEGs without access to any other ancillary information. We compared their rating to the reading of hospital clinicians with access to ancillary information. In Phase II, we measured the accuracy of the same raters reading representative samples of the discordant EEGs in full and reduced configurations presented randomly by comparing their performance to majority consensus as the gold standard. RESULTS: Of the 95 EEGs without seizures in the selected fm-EEG, readers of rm-EEG identified 92 cases (97%) as having no seizure activity. Of 117 EEGs with “seizures” identified in the selected fm-EEG, none of the cases was labeled as normal on rm-EEG. Readers of rm-EEG reported pathological activity in 100% of cases, but labeled them as seizures (N = 77), rhythmic or periodic patterns (N = 24), epileptiform spikes (N = 7), or burst suppression (N = 6). When the same raters read representative epochs of the discordant EEG cases (N = 43) in both fm-EEG and rm-EEG configurations, we found high concordance (95%) and intra-rater agreement (93%) between fm-EEG and rm-EEG diagnoses. CONCLUSIONS: Reduced EEG with ten electrodes in circumferential configuration preserves key features of the traditional EEG system. Discrepancies between rm-EEG and fm-EEG as reported in some of the past studies can be in part due to methodological factors such as choice of gold standard diagnosis, asymmetric access to ancillary clinical information, and inter-rater variability rather than detection failure of rm-EEG as a result of electrode reduction per se.
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spelling pubmed-74164372020-10-05 Diagnostic Value of Electroencephalography with Ten Electrodes in Critically Ill Patients Westover, M. Brandon Gururangan, Kapil Markert, Matthew S. Blond, Benjamin N. Lai, Saien Benard, Shawna Bickel, Stephan Hirsch, Lawrence J. Parvizi, Josef Neurocrit Care Original Work BACKGROUND: In critical care settings, electroencephalography (EEG) with reduced number of electrodes (reduced montage EEG, rm-EEG) might be a timely alternative to the conventional full montage EEG (fm-EEG). However, past studies have reported variable accuracies for detecting seizures using rm-EEG. We hypothesized that the past studies did not distinguish between differences in sensitivity from differences in classification of EEG patterns by different readers. The goal of the present study was to revisit the diagnostic value of rm-EEG when confounding issues are accounted for. METHODS: We retrospectively collected 212 adult EEGs recorded at Massachusetts General Hospital and reviewed by two epileptologists with access to clinical, trending, and video information. In Phase I of the study, we re-configured the first 4 h of the EEGs in lateral circumferential montage with ten electrodes and asked new readers to interpret the EEGs without access to any other ancillary information. We compared their rating to the reading of hospital clinicians with access to ancillary information. In Phase II, we measured the accuracy of the same raters reading representative samples of the discordant EEGs in full and reduced configurations presented randomly by comparing their performance to majority consensus as the gold standard. RESULTS: Of the 95 EEGs without seizures in the selected fm-EEG, readers of rm-EEG identified 92 cases (97%) as having no seizure activity. Of 117 EEGs with “seizures” identified in the selected fm-EEG, none of the cases was labeled as normal on rm-EEG. Readers of rm-EEG reported pathological activity in 100% of cases, but labeled them as seizures (N = 77), rhythmic or periodic patterns (N = 24), epileptiform spikes (N = 7), or burst suppression (N = 6). When the same raters read representative epochs of the discordant EEG cases (N = 43) in both fm-EEG and rm-EEG configurations, we found high concordance (95%) and intra-rater agreement (93%) between fm-EEG and rm-EEG diagnoses. CONCLUSIONS: Reduced EEG with ten electrodes in circumferential configuration preserves key features of the traditional EEG system. Discrepancies between rm-EEG and fm-EEG as reported in some of the past studies can be in part due to methodological factors such as choice of gold standard diagnosis, asymmetric access to ancillary clinical information, and inter-rater variability rather than detection failure of rm-EEG as a result of electrode reduction per se. Springer US 2020-02-07 2020 /pmc/articles/PMC7416437/ /pubmed/32034656 http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s12028-019-00911-4 Text en © The Author(s) 2020 Open AccessThis article is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License, which permits use, sharing, adaptation, distribution and reproduction in any medium or format, as long as you give appropriate credit to the original author(s) and the source, provide a link to the Creative Commons licence, and indicate if changes were made. The images or other third party material in this article are included in the article's Creative Commons licence, unless indicated otherwise in a credit line to the material. If material is not included in the article's Creative Commons licence and your intended use is not permitted by statutory regulation or exceeds the permitted use, you will need to obtain permission directly from the copyright holder. To view a copy of this licence, visit http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/.
spellingShingle Original Work
Westover, M. Brandon
Gururangan, Kapil
Markert, Matthew S.
Blond, Benjamin N.
Lai, Saien
Benard, Shawna
Bickel, Stephan
Hirsch, Lawrence J.
Parvizi, Josef
Diagnostic Value of Electroencephalography with Ten Electrodes in Critically Ill Patients
title Diagnostic Value of Electroencephalography with Ten Electrodes in Critically Ill Patients
title_full Diagnostic Value of Electroencephalography with Ten Electrodes in Critically Ill Patients
title_fullStr Diagnostic Value of Electroencephalography with Ten Electrodes in Critically Ill Patients
title_full_unstemmed Diagnostic Value of Electroencephalography with Ten Electrodes in Critically Ill Patients
title_short Diagnostic Value of Electroencephalography with Ten Electrodes in Critically Ill Patients
title_sort diagnostic value of electroencephalography with ten electrodes in critically ill patients
topic Original Work
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7416437/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32034656
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s12028-019-00911-4
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