1. Quantitative EEG and functional outcome following acute ischemic stroke.
- Author
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Bentes C, Peralta AR, Viana P, Martins H, Morgado C, Casimiro C, Franco AC, Fonseca AC, Geraldes R, Canhão P, Pinho E Melo T, Paiva T, and Ferro JM
- Subjects
- Aged, Brain Ischemia diagnosis, Brain Waves physiology, Cohort Studies, Electroencephalography methods, Female, Humans, Longitudinal Studies, Male, Middle Aged, Prospective Studies, Stroke diagnosis, Treatment Outcome, Brain Ischemia physiopathology, Electroencephalography trends, Recovery of Function physiology, Stroke physiopathology
- Abstract
Objective: To identify the most accurate quantitative electroencephalographic (qEEG) predictor(s) of unfavorable post-ischemic stroke outcome, and its discriminative capacity compared to already known demographic, clinical and imaging prognostic markers., Methods: Prospective cohort of 151 consecutive anterior circulation ischemic stroke patients followed for 12 months. EEG was recorded within 72 h and at discharge or 7 days post-stroke. QEEG (global band power, symmetry, affected/unaffected hemisphere and time changes) indices were calculated from mean Fast Fourier Transform and analyzed as predictors of unfavorable outcome (mRS ≥ 3), at discharge and 12 months poststroke, before and after adjustment for age, admission NIHSS and ASPECTS., Results: Higher delta, lower alpha and beta relative powers (RP) predicted outcome. Indices with higher discriminative capacity were delta-theta to alpha-beta ratio (DTABR) and alpha RP. Outcome models including either of these and other clinical/imaging stroke outcome predictors were superior to models without qEEG data. In models with qEEG indices, infarct size was not a significant outcome predictor., Conclusions: DTAABR and alpha RP are the best qEEG indices and superior to ASPECTS in post-stroke outcome prediction. They improve the discriminative capacity of already known clinical and imaging stroke outcome predictors, both at discharge and 12 months after stroke., Significance: qEEG indices are independent predictors of stroke outcome., (Copyright © 2018 International Federation of Clinical Neurophysiology. Published by Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2018
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