Neurology India
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Prediction of prognosis in comatose patients surviving a cardiac arrest is still one of the intractable problems in critical care neurology because of lack of fool-proof ways to assess the outcome. Of all these measures, somatosensory-evoked potential (SSEP) has been perhaps the most evaluated and heavily relied-upon tool over the past several decades for assessing coma. Recent studies have given rise to concerns regarding the "absoluteness" of SSEP signals for the prognostic evaluation of coma. ⋯ However, SSEP recordings should follow certain standards. One should be aware that its interpretation may be biased by several factors. The bias created by the concept of "self-fulfilling hypothesis" should always be borne in mind before discontinuation of life support systems in terminal patients.