| Literature DB >> 25482125 |
Koji Hosokawa1, Nicolas Gaspard2,3, Fuhong Su4, Mauro Oddo5, Jean-Louis Vincent6, Fabio Silvio Taccone7.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Several studies have reported the presence of electroencephalography (EEG) abnormalities or altered evoked potentials (EPs) during sepsis. However, the role of these tests in the diagnosis and prognostic assessment of sepsis-associated encephalopathy remains unclear.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 25482125 PMCID: PMC4277650 DOI: 10.1186/s13054-014-0674-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Crit Care ISSN: 1364-8535 Impact factor: 9.097
Figure 1Preferred reporting items for systematic reviews and meta-analyses (PRISMA) flow diagram showing selection processes.
Summary of included studies
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| 16 | P | Internal medicine (NA) | 73 | CAP | 43 (59%) | 13 ± 4 | NA | NA | qEEG VEP | 1 | Y | |
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| 21 | P | Medical and surgical ICU (100%) | 71 | SS with brain dysfunctiona | 71 (100%) | NA (SAPS II 49 (38 to 60)) | 48 (68%) | 49 (69%) | EEG | NA | N | |
| 20 | NA | ICU (100%) | 30 | SSa | 30 (100%) | 32 ± 6 | NA | 30 (100%) | EEG | 4 | N | |
| 17 | P | Medical ICU (100%) | 68 | SS | 68 (100%) | NA (APACHE III, 101 ± 26) | 31 (46%) | 33 (49%) | SSEP | 1 to 2 | Y | |
| 19 | NA | ICU (100%) | 14 | Sepsis | 14 (100%) | 18.6 ± 6.0 | 8 (57%) | 12 (85%) | qEEG | 1 to 5 | Y | |
| 18 | P | ICU (100%) | 69 | Severe Infectionsb | 69 (100%) | NA | 46 (67%) | 0 | EEG | NA | Y | |
| 22 | NA | ICU(100%) | 6 | Severe Infectionsb | 6 (100%) | NA | 1 (17%) | 0 | EEG AEP | 1 to 11 | N | |
| 23 | NA | NA (NA) | 14 | Severe Infectionsb | 14 (100%) | NA | 14 (100%) | NA | EEG | NA | Y | |
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| 32 | R | Surgical ICU (100%) | 154 | Encephalopathy +/− seizuresa | 100 (65%) | NA | 73 (47%) | 106 (70%) | cEEG | 4 to 9 | Y | |
| 28 | R | Hospital (70%) | 154 | Encephalopathy | 72 (47%) | NA | 135 (88%) | 20 (13%) | EEG | NA | Y | |
| 27 | R | Hospital (81%) | 105 | Encephalopathy and TWs | 62 (59%) | NA | 84 (80%) | 20 (19%) | EEG | NA | Y | |
| 24 | R | Hospital (88%) | 400 | GPDs | 144 (36%) | NA | 249 (62%) | NA | cEEG | NA | Y | |
| 30 | R | Medical ICU (100%) | 201 | Encephalopathy +/− seizures | 120 (60%) | NA | NA | 29 (14%) | cEEG | NA | Y | |
| 26 | P | Adult ICU (100%) | 125 | Patients on MVa | 78 (62%) | 27.4 ± 8.2 | 93 (74%) | 123 (98%) | qEEG (BIS) | NA | Y | |
| 29 | P | Surgical ICU (100%) | 54 | Post-abdominal surgery | 24 (44%) | NA (SAPS II, 34 (22 to 48)) | NA | 0 | AEP | 1 | Y | |
| 31 | P | Burns ICU (100%) | 64 | SIRS | 44 (69%) | NA | NA | NA | EEG | NA | N | |
| 25 | P | Medical ICU (100%) | 103 | MOF and Encephalopathy | 74 (72%) | NA (APACHE III, 101 ± 24) | 52 (50%) | 60 (58%) | SSEP | 1 to 2 | Y | |
aexcluded pre-existing neurological or psychiatric diseases; bexcluded infections of the central nervous system. AEP, auditory evoked potentials; APACHE, Acute Physiology and Chronic Health Evaluation; BIS, bispectral index; CAP, community-acquired pneumonia; cEEG, continuous EEG monitoring; CI, confidence interval; CNS, central nervous system; EEG, electroencephalogram; GPDs, general periodic discharges; ICU, intensive care unit; MOF, multiple organ failure; MV, mechanical ventilation; N, No; NA, not available; P, prospective; qEEG, quantitative electroencephalography; R, retrospective; SAPS, Simplified Acute Physiology Score; SE, status epilepticus; SIRS, systemic inflammatory response syndrome; SS, severe sepsis or septic shock; SSEP, somatosensory evoked potential; TWs, triphasic waves; WBC, white blood cell; VEP, visual evoked potentials; Y, Yes.
The incidence and significance of background abnormalities, periodic and rhythmic discharges and electrographic seizures in sepsis
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| 21 | B | Slow waves; malignant EEG pattern | 5/43 (12%); 15/43 (35%) | Malignant EEG pattern associated with chronic leukoencephalopathy and acute brain ischemia. | |
| PD/RD | TWs | 5/43 (12%) | NA | ||
| Esz | ESz | 13/43 (30%) | NA | ||
| 20 | B | Theta-delta; delta; burst-suppression | 2/18 (11%); 12/18 (67%); 2/18 (11%) | NA | |
| PD/RD | TWs | 1/18 (6%) | NA | ||
| 18 | B | Theta; delta; suppression; no reactivity | 16/62 (26%); 22/62 (35%); 8/62 (13%), 9/62 (15%) | Severity of SAE associated with severity of EEG abnormalities Delta (OR = 2.4) and suppression (OR = 4.5) associated with mortality. | |
| PD/RD | TWs | 5/60 (10%) | TWs associated with mortality (OR = 1.5) | ||
| 22 | B | Theta; delta | 4/6 (67%); 2/6 (33%) | NA | |
| 23 | B | Slow wave sleep; Theta-delta; delta; Paroxysmal theta | 4/14 (29%); 2/14 (14%); 1/14(7%); 1/14 (7%) | NA | |
| PD/RD | Paroxysmal slowing with sharp waves | 2/14 (14%) | NA | ||
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| 32 | B | No reactivity | 28/152 (18%) | No reactivity tended to be associated with poor outcome (OR = 2.8, | |
| PD/RD | PEDs (including GPDs, PLEDs and BIPLEDs) | 45 (29 %) | PEDs persisting for >24 h associated with poor outcome (OR = 2.9, | ||
| Esz | NCSz (including NCSE) | 24/154 (16 %) (8/154 (5 %)) | NCSz associated with poor outcome (OR = 10.4, | ||
| 27 | B | Predominant theta; theta/delta; no reactivity | 30/105 (29%); 55/105 (52%); 22/105(21%) | Lack of EEG background reactivity associated with mortality (OR = 3.7, | |
| PD/RD | TWs | 105/105 (100%) | NA | ||
| 28 | B | Theta; theta/delta; delta; FIRDA | 34/154 (22%); 32/154 (21%); 28/154 (18%); 26/154 (18%) | Theta/delta and delta associated with more severe alteration of consciousness; Theta/delta associated with poor outcome (OR = 2.5, | |
| PD/RD | TWs | 34/154 (22%) | TWs associated with more severe alteration of consciousness and with higher mortality (OR = 4.5, | ||
| 24 | PD/RD | GPDs including TWs; | (50%, case-matched cohort); 63/400 (16%); 24/400 (6%) | No significant difference in poor outcome between GPDs and controls; GPDs associated with a longer ICU stay (18 days versus 15 days, | |
| Esz | (Seizures) | (73/400 (18%)) | NA | ||
| 30 | PD/RD | PEDs (including GPDs, PLEDs and BIPLEDs) | 34/201 (17%); | Diagnostic value of the presence of ESz or PEDs for sepsis (Sen = 0.32; Spe = 0.91; PLR = 3.7; NLR = 0.7) ESz or PEDs associated with mortality or severe disability at hospital discharge (adjusted OR = 19.1, | |
| Esz | ESz | 21/201 (10%) | NA | ||
| 31 | B | Slow waves | 27/27 (100%) | NA | |
| PD/RD | TWs | 1/27 (4%) | NA | ||
B, background; EEG, electroencephalogram; ESz, electrographic seizures; FIRDA, frontal intermittent delta activity; GPDs, general periodic discharges; NA, not applicable; NCSE, nonconvulsive status epilepticus; NCSz, nonconvulsive seizures; NLR, negative likelihood ratio; OR, odds ratio; (P)(BI)LEDs, (periodic) (bilateral independent) lateralized epileptiform discharges; PD/RD: periodic and rhythmic discharges; PEDs, periodic epileptiform discharges; PLR, positive likelihood ratio; SAE, sepsis-associated encephalopathy; Sen, sensitivity; Spe, specificity; TWs, triphasic waves.
Figure 2Typical electroencephalogaphic (EEG) findings in patients with sepsis-associated brain dysfunction. a) Frontal intermittent rhythmic delta activity (intermittent generalized rhythmic delta activity (GRDA), frontally predominant according to the ACNS Critical Care EEG terminology): burst of bilateral symmetrical and synchronous monomorphic delta (1.5 Hz in this case) activity predominating over the frontal regions. b) Triphasic waves (generalized periodic discharges (GPDs) with triphasic morphology according to the ACNS Critical Care EEG terminology): bilateral synchronous and symmetrical discharges occurring at a periodic interval (1.5 Hz); each discharge has three phases (negative–positive–negative), the second phase has the highest amplitude and each phase is longer in duration than the previous one. c) Nonconvulsive status epilepticus: presence of generalized periodic discharges at 2 to 2.5 Hz maximal over the frontal regions; discharges have a sharp wave morphology; independent sporadic sharp waves are present over the left posterior region. d) Moderate generalized slowing (same patient as in c after administration of IV levetiracetam): disappearance of generalized periodic discharges; mixed theta-delta background. ACNS, American Clinical Neurophysiology Society.
Findings of quantitative EEG analysis in patients with sepsis
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| 16 | Spectral analysis (Fast Fourier Transform) | Lower relative power in the alpha band; higher relative power in the theta and beta band; lower alpha peak frequency; higher theta peak frequency | NA | |
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| 19 | Spectral analysis (Fast Fourier Transform); nonlinear analysis (Kaplan z-score) | Lower spectral EEG ratio; higher Kaplan z-score | Kaplan z-score correlated negatively with the APACHE II score. | |
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| 26 | Burst suppression index (provided from a BIS monitor) | Burst suppression occurred in 49 of 125 patients (39%) | Diagnostic value of the presence of burst and suppression for sepsis (Sen = 0.42; Spe = 0.66; PLR = 1.2; NLR = 0.9). Burst suppression with higher six-month mortality (hazard ratio = 2.04, | |
APACHE, Acute Physiology and Chronic Health Evaluation; BIS, bispectral index; EEG, electroencephalogram; NA, not applicable; NLR, negative likelihood ratio; PLR, positive likelihood ratio; Sen, sensitivity; Spe, specificity.
Abnormalities in evoked potentials in patients with sepsis
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| 16 | VEP | VEP N1-P1 | no difference | ||
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| 17 | SSEP, including long-latency responses | N9, N20 and N70 peak latency; N13–N20 and N20–N70 peak-peak latency | Prolonged in 57%, 47%, 94%, 34% and 84% of patients, respectively | SSEP peak latencies correlated with the APACHE III score and were the same in sedated and non-sedated patients. | |
| 22 | AEP | I-V interwave latency | Prolonged in 4/6 (67%) | ||
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| 29 | AEP | 15% decrease of the AAI | 80% in sepsis patients | The median AAI of patients with SAE, 58 (range of 40 to 70) whereas it in ones without, 70 (55 to 90). | |
| 25 | SSEP, including long-latency responses | N9, N20 and N70 peak latency; N13–N20 and N20–N70 peak-peak latency | Prolonged in patients with sepsis compared to controls | The delay of N70 peak latencies correlated with the APACHE III score. Peak latencies were not different in sedated and non-sedated patients. | |
AAI, A-line Autoregression Index; ABSR, auditory brain stem response; AEP, auditory evoked potentials; APACHE, Acute Physiology and Chronic Health Evaluation; EEG, electroencephalogram; NA, not applicable; SAE, sepsis-associated encephalopathy; SSEP, somatosensory evoked potentials; VEP, visually evoked potentials.