• Neurocritical care · Feb 2024

    A Novel Approach to Screen for Somatosensory Evoked Potentials in Critical Care.

    • Aude Sangare, Benjamin Rohaut, Alaina Borden, Julie Zyss, Angela Velazquez, Kevin Doyle, Lionel Naccache, and Jan Claassen.
    • Brain Institute, ICM, CNRS, Sorbonne Université, Inserm U1127, UMR 7225, Paris, France. aude.sangare@aphp.fr.
    • Neurocrit Care. 2024 Feb 1; 40 (1): 237250237-250.

    BackgroundSomatosensory evoked potentials (SSEPs) help prognostication, particularly in patients with diffuse brain injury. However, use of SSEP is limited in critical care. We propose a novel, low-cost approach allowing acquisition of screening SSEP using widely available intensive care unit (ICU) equipment, specifically a peripheral "train-of-four" stimulator and standard electroencephalograph.MethodsThe median nerve was stimulated using a train-of-four stimulator, and a standard 21-channel electroencephalograph was recorded to generate the screening SSEP. Generation of the SSEP was supported by visual inspection, univariate event-related potentials statistics, and a multivariate support vector machine (SVM) decoding algorithm. This approach was validated in 15 healthy volunteers and validated against standard SSEPs in 10 ICU patients. The ability of this approach to predict poor neurological outcome, defined as death, vegetative state, or severe disability at 6 months, was tested in an additional set of 39 ICU patients.ResultsIn each of the healthy volunteers, both the univariate and the SVM methods reliably detected SSEP responses. In patients, when compared against the standard SSEP method, the univariate event-related potentials method matched in nine of ten patients (sensitivity = 94%, specificity = 100%), and the SVM had 100% sensitivity and specificity when compared with the standard method. For the 49 ICU patients, we performed both the univariate and the SVM methods: a bilateral absence of short latency responses (n = 8) predicted poor neurological outcome with 0% FPR (sensitivity = 21%, specificity = 100%).ConclusionsSomatosensory evoked potentials can reliably be recorded using the proposed approach. Given the very good but slightly lower sensitivity of absent SSEPs in the proposed screening approach, confirmation of absent SSEP responses using standard SSEP recordings is advised.© 2023. Springer Science+Business Media, LLC, part of Springer Nature and Neurocritical Care Society.

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