The early recognition of comatose patients with a hopeless prognosis-regardless of how aggressively they are managed-is of utmost importance. Median somatosensory evoked potentials supplement and enhance neurologic examination findings in anoxic-ischemic coma and severe brain trauma, and are useful as an early guide to outcome. The key finding is that bilateral absence of cortical evoked potentials, generated by thalamocortical tracts, reliably predicts unfavorable outcome in comatose patients after cardiac arrest, and correlates strongly with death or persistent vegetative state in severe brain trauma. The author studied 50 comatose patients with preserved brainstem function after cardiac arrest. All 23 patients with bilateral absence of cortical evoked potentials died without awakening. Neuropathologic study in seven patients disclosed widespread ischemic changes or frank cortical laminar necrosis. The remaining 27 patients with normal or delayed central conduction times had an uncertain prognosis because some died without awakening or entered a persistent vegetative state. The majority of patients with normal central conduction times had a good outcome, whereas a delay in central conduction times increased the likelihood of neurologic deficit or death. This report includes a systematic review of the literature concerning adults in anoxic-ischemic coma and severe brain trauma, in which somatosensory evoked potentials were used as an early guide to predict clinical outcome. Greater use of somatosensory evoked potentials in anoxic-ischemic coma and severe brain trauma would identify those patients unlikely to recover and would avoid costly medical care that is to no avail.
CSF CKBB measurement helps to estimate degree of brain damage and thus neurologic prognosis after cardiac arrest. However, results of this retrospective study could reflect in part a self-fulfilling prophecy.
ObjectivesTo re-evaluate the role of median nerve somatosensory evoked potentials (SSEPs) and bilateral loss of the N20 cortical wave as a predictor of unfavorable outcome in comatose patients following cardiac arrest (CA) in the therapeutic hypothermia (TH) era.MethodsReview the results and conclusions drawn from isolated case reports and small series of comatose patients following CA in which the bilateral absence of N20 response has been associated with recovery, and evaluate the proposal that SSEP can no longer be considered a reliable and accurate predictor of unfavorable neurologic outcome.ResultsThere are many methodological limitations in those patients reported in the literature with severe post anoxic encephalopathy who recover despite having lost their N20 cortical potential. These limitations include lack of sufficient clinical and neurologic data, severe core body hypothermia, specifics of electrophysiologic testing, technical issues such as background noise artifacts, flawed interpretations sometimes related to interobserver inconsistency, and the extreme variability in interpretation and quality of SSEP analysis among different clinicians and hospitals.ConclusionsThe absence of the SSEP N20 cortical wave remains one of the most reliable early prognostic tools for identifying unfavorable neurologic outcome in the evaluation of patients with severe anoxic-ischemic encephalopathy whether or not they have been treated with TH. When confounding factors are eliminated the false positive rate (FPR) approaches zero.
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