2018
DOI: 10.1088/1361-6579/aae9fd
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Reproducibility of dynamic cerebral autoregulation parameters: a multi-centre, multi-method study

Abstract: Objective: Different methods to calculate dynamic cerebral autoregulation (dCA) parameters are available. However, most of these methods demonstrate poor reproducibility that limit their reliability for clinical use. Inter-centre differences in study protocols, modelling approaches and default parameter settings, have all led to a lack of standardisation and comparability between studies. We evaluated reproducibility of dCA parameters by assessing systematic errors in surrogate data resulting from different mo… Show more

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Cited by 28 publications
(42 citation statements)
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“…This procedure resulted in N = 55 left sides, N = 71 right sides, and N = 22 artificial sides. The results for the artificial and physiological data have been presented elsewhere, and will not be reported here [21]. Since there were no significant differences between left and right sided values for all DCA variables examined in this study, left and right sides were averaged in case of bilateral measurement, or were used singly in case of unilateral missing data.…”
Section: Pre-analysis Data Validationmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…This procedure resulted in N = 55 left sides, N = 71 right sides, and N = 22 artificial sides. The results for the artificial and physiological data have been presented elsewhere, and will not be reported here [21]. Since there were no significant differences between left and right sided values for all DCA variables examined in this study, left and right sides were averaged in case of bilateral measurement, or were used singly in case of unilateral missing data.…”
Section: Pre-analysis Data Validationmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The main focus of this study was to evaluate any differences in reproducibility between the different analysis strategies that have been developed. Initially, surrogate data were used to isolate the separate effects of modelling method from physiological variability [21]. In the second analysis, physiological data were used to quantify reproducibility of several DCA analysis methods on physiological data [22].…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This limitation was addressed in the current multi-center study. An initial report (Sanders et al, 2018) described the influence of different methods of analysis on the reproducibility of synthetic data, where surrogate time-series of CBF velocity (CBFv) were generated based on real measurements of BP, coupled with a realistic signal-to-noise ratio. These generated CBFv data were based on a linear model.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Finally, it is important to emphasize that the results of this study are limited to the use of TFA within the set of parameters described above and cannot be extended to other approaches for modelling the BP-CBFV dynamic relationship such as time-domain techniques (Czosnyka et al, 2008;Mahdi et al, 2017;Nogueira et al, 2013;Panerai et al, 2001;Panerai et al, 2016b;Sanders et al, 2018;Tzeng et al, 2012) or closed-loop models as proposed by Marmarelis et al (2013).…”
Section: Limitations Of the Studymentioning
confidence: 99%