Department of Neurology and Neurological Sciences, Stanford University School of Medicine, Stanford, CA, USA.
Wake Forest University School of Medicine, 1 Medical Center Boulevard, Winston-Salem, NC, 27157, USA.
Neurocrit Care. 2018 Oct;29(2):302-312. doi: 10.1007/s12028-018-0543-7.
Patients suffering from non-convulsive seizures experience delays in diagnosis and treatment due to limitations in acquiring and interpreting electroencephalography (EEG) data. The Ceribell EEG System offers rapid EEG acquisition and conversion of EEG signals to sound (sonification) using a proprietary algorithm. This study was designed to test the performance of this EEG system in an intensive care unit (ICU) setting and measure its impact on clinician treatment decision.
Encephalopathic ICU patients at Stanford University Hospital were enrolled if clinical suspicion for seizures warranted EEG monitoring. Treating physicians rated suspicion for seizure and decided if the patient needed antiepileptic drug (AED) treatment at the time of bedside evaluation. After listening to 30 s of EEG from each hemisphere in each patient, they reevaluated their suspicion for seizure and decision for additional treatment. The EEG waveforms recorded with Ceribell EEG were subsequently analyzed by three blinded epileptologists to assess the presence or absence of seizures within and outside the sonification window. Study outcomes were EEG set up time, ease of use of the device, change in clinician seizure suspicion, and change in decision to treat with AED before and after sonification.
Thirty-five cases of EEG sonification were performed. Mean EEG setup time was 6 ± 3 min, and time to obtain sonified EEG was significantly faster than conventional EEG (p < 0.001). One patient had non-convulsive seizure during sonification and another had rhythmic activity that was followed by seizure shortly after sonification. Change in treatment decision after sonification occurred in approximately 40% of patients and resulted in a significant net reduction in unnecessary additional treatments (p = 0.01). Ceribell EEG System was consistently rated easy to use.
The Ceribell EEG System enabled rapid acquisition of EEG in patients at risk for non-convulsive seizures and aided clinicians in their evaluation of encephalopathic ICU patients. The ease of use and speed of EEG acquisition and interpretation by EEG-untrained individuals has the potential to improve emergent clinical decision making by quickly detecting non-convulsive seizures in the ICU.
非惊厥性发作的患者由于获取和解释脑电图 (EEG) 数据的限制,导致诊断和治疗延迟。Ceribell EEG 系统使用专有算法提供快速 EEG 采集和 EEG 信号转换为声音(声谱图)。本研究旨在测试该 EEG 系统在重症监护病房 (ICU) 环境中的性能,并测量其对临床医生治疗决策的影响。
斯坦福大学医院的脑病 ICU 患者,如果临床怀疑有癫痫发作需要进行 EEG 监测,则入组。治疗医生在床边评估时根据癫痫发作的可疑程度来决定是否需要使用抗癫痫药物 (AED) 治疗。在听取每位患者每侧半球 30 秒的 EEG 后,他们重新评估癫痫发作的可疑程度以及是否需要进一步治疗的决定。随后,三名盲法癫痫学家分析了 Ceribell EEG 记录的 EEG 波形,以评估声谱图窗口内和外是否存在癫痫发作。研究结果为 EEG 设置时间、设备易用性、临床医生癫痫发作可疑程度的变化以及声谱图前后使用 AED 治疗的决策变化。
共进行了 35 例 EEG 声谱图。平均 EEG 设置时间为 6±3 分钟,获得声谱图 EEG 的时间明显快于常规 EEG(p<0.001)。一名患者在声谱图期间发生非惊厥性发作,另一名患者在声谱图后出现节律性活动,随后发生癫痫发作。大约 40%的患者在声谱图后改变了治疗决策,导致不必要的额外治疗显著减少(p=0.01)。Ceribell EEG 系统的使用一直被评为简单易用。
Ceribell EEG 系统能够快速获取有非惊厥性发作风险的患者的 EEG,并帮助临床医生评估脑病 ICU 患者。未经 EEG 培训的人员能够轻松使用和快速获取和解释 EEG,有可能通过快速检测 ICU 中的非惊厥性发作来改善紧急临床决策。