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Cortical somatosensory evoked potential amplitudes and clinical outcome after cardiac arrest: a retrospective multicenter study. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • Bilaterally absent cortical somatosensory evoked potentials (SSEPs) are linked to a high likelihood of poor outcomes in comatose cardiac arrest patients, with only 0.8% surviving with a good outcome.
  • This study assessed the amplitudes of cortical SSEPs using a standardized method, finding significant inter-rater agreement among evaluators and identifying 42.9% of poor outcome patients with low amplitude SSEPs.
  • The findings suggest that SSEPs lower than 0.5 µV indicate severe brain injury, while high amplitudes correlate with better prognosis, emphasizing the importance of standardized assessments in clinical decisions.

Article Abstract

Objective: Bilaterally absent cortical somatosensory evoked potentials (SSEPs) reliably predict poor outcome in comatose cardiac arrest (CA) patients. Cortical SSEP amplitudes are a recent prognostic extension; however, amplitude thresholds, inter-recording, and inter-rater agreement remain uncertain.

Methods: In a retrospective multicenter cohort study, we determined cortical SSEP amplitudes of comatose CA patients using a standardized evaluation pathway. We studied inter-recording agreement in repeated SSEPs and inter-rater agreement by four raters independently determining 100 cortical SSEP amplitudes. Primary outcome was assessed using the cerebral performance category (CPC) upon intensive care unit discharge dichotomized into good (CPC 1-3) and poor outcome (CPC 4-5).

Results: Of 706 patients with SSEPs with median 3 days after CA, 277 (39.2%) had good and 429 (60.8%) poor outcome. Of patients with bilaterally absent cortical SSEPs, one (0.8%) survived with CPC 3 and 130 (99.2%) had poor outcome. Otherwise, the lowest cortical SSEP amplitude in good outcome patients was 0.5 µV. 184 (42.9%) of 429 poor outcome patients had lower cortical SSEP amplitudes. In 106 repeated SSEPs, there were 6 (5.7%) with prognostication-relevant changes in SSEP categories. Following a standardized evaluation pathway, inter-rater agreement was almost perfect with a Fleiss' kappa of 0.88.

Interpretation: Bilaterally absent and cortical SSEP amplitudes below 0.5 µV predicted poor outcome with high specificity. A standardized evaluation pathway provided high inter-rater and inter-recording agreement. Regain of consciousness in patients with bilaterally absent cortical SSEPs rarely occurs. High-amplitude cortical SSEP amplitudes likely indicate the absence of severe brain injury.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10632270PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00415-023-11951-4DOI Listing

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