Interdepartmental Division of Critical Care Medicine, Department of Medicine, Li Ka Shing Knowledge Institute, University of Toronto, 204 Victoria Street, 4th Floor Room 411, Toronto, ON, M5B 1T8, Canada.
Department of Critical Care Medicine, Sunnybrook Health Sciences Center, Toronto, ON, Canada.
Can J Anaesth. 2021 Aug;68(8):1214-1230. doi: 10.1007/s12630-021-01962-y. Epub 2021 Mar 11.
We systematically reviewed existing critical care electroencephalography (EEG) educational programs for non-neurologists, with the primary goal of reporting the content covered, methods of instruction, overall duration, and participant experience. Our secondary goals were to assess the impact of EEG programs on participants' core knowledge, and the agreement between non-experts and experts for seizure identification.
Major databases were searched from inception to 30 August 2020. Randomized controlled trials, cohort studies, and descriptive studies were all considered if they reported an EEG curriculum for non-neurologists in a critical care setting. Data were presented thematically for the qualitative primary outcome and a meta-analysis using a random effects model was performed for the quantitative secondary outcomes.
Twenty-nine studies were included after reviewing 7,486 citations. Twenty-two studies were single centre, 17 were from North America, and 16 were published after 2016. Most EEG studies were targeted to critical care nurses (17 studies), focused on processed forms of EEG with amplitude-integrated EEG being the most common (15 studies), and were shorter than one day in duration (24 studies). In pre-post studies, EEG programs significantly improved participants' knowledge of tested material (standardized mean change, 1.79; 95% confidence interval [CI], 0.86 to 2.73). Agreement for seizure identification between non-experts and experts was moderate (Cohen's kappa = 0.44; 95% CI, 0.27 to 0.60).
It is feasible to teach basic EEG to participants in critical care settings from different clinical backgrounds, including physicians and nurses. Brief training programs can enable bedside providers to recognize high-yield abnormalities such as non-convulsive seizures.
我们系统地回顾了现有的非神经科医生的重症监护脑电图(EEG)教育计划,主要目的是报告所涵盖的内容、教学方法、总时长以及参与者的经验。我们的次要目标是评估 EEG 计划对参与者核心知识的影响,以及非专家与专家在识别癫痫发作方面的一致性。
从创建到 2020 年 8 月 30 日,主要数据库都进行了搜索。如果一项研究报告了重症监护环境中非神经科医生的 EEG 课程,则可以考虑随机对照试验、队列研究和描述性研究。对于定性的主要结果,数据以主题形式呈现,对于定量的次要结果,使用随机效应模型进行荟萃分析。
在审查了 7486 条引用后,共纳入 29 项研究。22 项研究为单中心研究,17 项研究来自北美,16 项研究发表于 2016 年后。大多数 EEG 研究针对重症监护护士(17 项研究),侧重于经处理的 EEG 形式,其中振幅整合 EEG 最为常见(15 项研究),且持续时间都短于一天(24 项研究)。在前后研究中,EEG 计划显著提高了参与者对测试材料的知识(标准化均数差值,1.79;95%置信区间[CI],0.86 至 2.73)。非专家与专家在识别癫痫发作方面的一致性为中等(Cohen's kappa = 0.44;95%CI,0.27 至 0.60)。
从不同临床背景(包括医生和护士)的重症监护环境中,向参与者教授基本的 EEG 是可行的。简短的培训计划可以使床边提供者能够识别高产量的异常,如非惊厥性癫痫发作。