Purpose: Problems with the availability of standard EEG monitoring in the intensive care unit have led to the use of recordings that have limited spatial coverage. We studied the performance of limited coverage EEG compared with more traditional full-montage EEG.
Methods: Continuous EEG recordings were performed on 170 patients using the full-montage 10-20 placement of electrodes as a reference recording and an abbreviated montage of electrodes applied below the hairline (subhairline).
Over the past decade, an exciting area of research has emerged that demonstrates strong links between specific nursing care activities and patient outcomes. This body of research has resulted in the identification of a set of "nursing-sensitive outcomes"(NSOs). These NSOs may be interpreted with more meaning when they are linked to evidence-based best practice guidelines, which provide a structured means of ensuring care is consistent among all health care team members, across geographic locations, and across care settings.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPurpose: Due to differences in epilepsy types and surgery, economic evaluations of epilepsy treatment in adults cannot be extrapolated to children. We evaluated the cost-effectiveness of epilepsy surgery compared to medical treatment in children with intractable epilepsy.
Method: Decision tree analysis was used to evaluate the cost-effectiveness of surgery relative to medical management.
Introduction: Availability of standard, continuous electroencephalography (cEEG) monitoring in ICU is very limited, although commercially available 4-channel modules are present in many ICUs. We investigated the sensitivity of such modules compared with the more complete monitoring with a standard EEG system.
Methods: Seventy patients at high risk of seizures in the medical-surgical intensive care unit and Epilepsy Monitoring Unit were recorded simultaneously for at least 24 h with a 4-channel commercial ICU bedside monitoring system (Datex-Ohmeda) with a subhairline montage and a standard EEG machine (XLTEK) using the international 10-20 system of electrode placement.
Background: Continuous electroencephalogram (cEEG) recordings are being increasingly used in intensive care units (ICUs) to detect epileptic seizures and other changes. MRI scans can interrupt such recordings if the EEG electrodes need to be removed and important data can be missed.
Methods: We retrospectively examined EEG recordings from ICU patients who underwent MRI scans, comparing those from patients with the MRI-compatible EEG electrodes with those who had to have the EEG electrodes removed before scanning.