Darby Joseph M, Shutter Lori A, Elmer Jonathan, Hirzallah Mohammad, Khandker Namir, Molyneaux Bradley J, Kaynar A Murat, Nigra Karen R, Wechsler Lawrence R
Department of Critical Care Medicine (JMD, LAS, JE, MH, NK, BJM, AMK), University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine; Department of Neurology (LAS, JE, BJM, LRW), University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine; Department of Emergency Medicine (JE), University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine; Department of Anesthesiology and Perioperative Medicine (AMK), University of Pittsburgh; and UPMC Presbyterian (KRN), Pittsburgh, PA.
Neurol Clin Pract. 2021 Feb;11(1):13-17. doi: 10.1212/CPJ.0000000000000798.
To determine whether telemedicine technology can be used to reliably determine the neurologic diagnosis of death (NDD) in patients with catastrophic brain injury (CBI).
We included a convenience sample of patients with CBI at a single academic medical center from November 2016 through June 2018. We simultaneously performed brain death evaluation at the bedside and remotely via telemedicine. Remote examiners were neurointensivists who were experienced and knowledgeable in the NDD. In addition to standard clinical examination, we used quantitative pupillometry to evaluate pupil size and reactivity. We determined the proportion of agreement for each NDD examination element and the overall diagnosis of brain death between bedside and remote examiners.
Twenty-nine patients with mean age 46 ± 18 years underwent 30 paired NDD examinations. Twenty-eight (97%) patients met the NDD criteria and were pronounced dead. One patient did not meet the NDD criteria and died after withdrawal of life support. With the exception of qualitative assessment of pupillary reactivity, we observed excellent agreement (97%-100% across NDD examination elements) between bedside and remote examiners and 97% agreement on the overall diagnosis of brain death. Unlike qualitative pupillary assessment, quantitative pupillometry was consistently interpretable by remote examiners.
Our results suggest that remote telemedicine technology can be used to verify the findings of bedside examiners performing NDD examinations when a pupillometer is used to assess pupillary reactivity. When performed by neurocritical care experts, the telemedicine NDD examination has potential to facilitate timely and accurate certification of brain death in patients with CBI.
This study provides Class IV evidence on the concordance of neurologic diagnosis of death by telemedicine and bedside examiners.
确定远程医疗技术是否可用于可靠地判定灾难性脑损伤(CBI)患者的神经学死亡诊断(NDD)。
我们纳入了2016年11月至2018年6月期间在一家学术医疗中心的CBI患者便利样本。我们同时在床边和通过远程医疗进行脑死亡评估。远程检查人员为在NDD方面经验丰富且知识渊博的神经重症监护医生。除了标准临床检查外,我们使用定量瞳孔测量法评估瞳孔大小和反应性。我们确定了每位NDD检查要素以及床边和远程检查人员之间脑死亡总体诊断的一致性比例。
29例平均年龄46±18岁的患者接受了30次配对的NDD检查。28例(97%)患者符合NDD标准并被宣告死亡。1例患者不符合NDD标准,在撤除生命支持后死亡。除瞳孔反应性的定性评估外,我们观察到床边和远程检查人员之间具有极佳的一致性(NDD检查要素的一致性为97%-100%),脑死亡总体诊断的一致性为97%。与定性瞳孔评估不同,远程检查人员能够始终如一地解读定量瞳孔测量结果。
我们的结果表明,当使用瞳孔测量仪评估瞳孔反应性时,远程医疗技术可用于验证进行NDD检查的床边检查人员的检查结果。由神经重症监护专家进行时,远程医疗NDD检查有潜力促进CBI患者脑死亡的及时、准确认证。
本研究提供了关于远程医疗和床边检查人员对神经学死亡诊断一致性的IV级证据。