2012
DOI: 10.1136/archdischild-2011-300716
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Cooling and seizure burden in term neonates: an observational study

Abstract: A decreased seizure burden was seen in neonates with moderate HIE who received cooling. This finding may explain some of the therapeutic benefits of cooling seen in term neonates with moderate HIE.

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Cited by 121 publications
(109 citation statements)
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References 33 publications
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“…High levels of agreement, comparable to our study, were reported for the detection of adult seizures,14 as well as for short duration recordings from a small cohort of seven neonates with seizures 11. In contrast, a recent study on older, acutely ill children with seizures reported a much lower kappa of 0.47,17 and another study in short duration recordings from 20 neonates reported an averaged ICC (equivalent to kappa for a binary outcome) of 0.57 10. A key difference in study methods is the length of EEG recording used.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 87%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…High levels of agreement, comparable to our study, were reported for the detection of adult seizures,14 as well as for short duration recordings from a small cohort of seven neonates with seizures 11. In contrast, a recent study on older, acutely ill children with seizures reported a much lower kappa of 0.47,17 and another study in short duration recordings from 20 neonates reported an averaged ICC (equivalent to kappa for a binary outcome) of 0.57 10. A key difference in study methods is the length of EEG recording used.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 87%
“…Each group was dichotomized with a threshold of: (1) 5 min per hour; (2) 12 min per hour; and (3) 30 min per hour. The first is potentially a minimum burden to initiate treatment with ASDs, the second may be useful for prognosis and the third is a common definition of electrographic status epilepticus 15, 16, 17…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…A similar number of neonates from our hypothermic and normothermic cohorts were treated with AEDs, but neonates treated with therapeutic hypothermia more frequently received one AED, while neonates not treated therapeutic hypothermia received three or more AEDs. This most probably reflects the increased seizure burden in the non‐therapeutic hypothermia group 10. The potential effects of AEDs on seizure burden and EEG background were not analysed in our cohort.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 95%
“…However, current protocols for therapeutic hypothermia are more effective in moderate than severe encephalopathy,1 and the TSB is significantly reduced in neonates undergoing therapeutic hypothermia with clinically moderate but not severe HIE 10. In HIE cohorts with hypothermia, seizures on cEEG were associated with more severe structural brain damage, although 40% of neonates with seizures may have a normal MRI 13, 14…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In an RCT with a similar design and effect size (placebo control, first line, rSB 1 , T d = 1h in Table 1); our model would have predicted a sample size of 14 neonates per group. Low et al (2012) also showed a significant reduction in total seizure burden in neonates treated with hypothermia in a cohort of 31 neonates [19]. In this case, our model would predict a cohort of 40 neonates based on a similar effect size; equivalent to an AED effect of 100% for 72h given within 1h of seizure onset (see placebo control, first line, TSB in Table 2).…”
Section: Aed Protocolmentioning
confidence: 99%