Abstract

BackgroundCurrently, continuous electroencephalographic monitoring (cEEG) is the only available diagnostic tool for continuous monitoring of brain function in intensive care unit (ICU) patients. Yet, the exact relevance of routinely applied ICU cEEG remains unclear, and information on the implementation of cEEG, especially in Europe, is scarce. This study explores current practices of cEEG in adult Dutch ICU departments focusing on organizational and operational factors, development over time and factors perceived relevant for abstaining its use.MethodsA national survey on cEEG in adults among the neurology and adult intensive care departments of all Dutch hospitals (n = 82) was performed.ResultsThe overall institutional response rate was 78%. ICU cEEG is increasingly used in the Netherlands (in 37% of all hospitals in 2016 versus in 21% in 2008). Currently in 88% of university, 55% of teaching and 14% of general hospitals use ICU cEEG. Reasons for not performing cEEG are diverse, including perceived non-feasibility and lack of data on the effect of cEEG use on patient outcome. Mostly, ICU cEEG is used for non-convulsive seizures or status epilepticus and prognostication. However, cEEG is never or rarely used for monitoring cerebral ischemia and raised intracranial pressure in traumatic brain injury. Review and reporting practices differ considerably between hospitals. Nearly all hospitals perform non-continuous review of cEEG traces. Methods for moving toward continuous review of cEEG traces are available but infrequently used in practice.ConclusionscEEG is increasingly used in Dutch ICUs. However, cEEG practices vastly differ between hospitals. Future research should focus on uniform cEEG practices including unambiguous EEG interpretation to facilitate collaborative research on cEEG, aiming to provide improved standard patient care and robust data on the impact of cEEG use on patient outcome.

Highlights

  • Considerable interest exists on methods for monitoring of the brain in intensive care unit (ICU) patients, such as continuous electroencephalographic monitoring. cEEG is the only contemporary available diagnostic tool

  • Concerning Europe, only two studies have been published: a German survey on scoring, monitoring, and parameter targeting in the ICU briefly mentioning cEEG [10] and a concise survey on the use of ICU cEEG in the Netherlands [11]

  • We explored how cEEG use has developed over time and which factors are considered relevant for abstaining from its use

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Summary

Introduction

Considerable interest exists on methods for monitoring of the brain in intensive care unit (ICU) patients, such as continuous electroencephalographic monitoring (cEEG). cEEG is the only contemporary available diagnostic toolDespite ambiguity on interpretation of ICU cEEG, several international guidelines recommend its use. In a 2015 consensus statement, the American Clinical Neurophysiology Society (ACNS) recommends cEEG monitoring for diagnosis and management of nonconvulsive seizures and status epilepticus, and other paroxysmal events [1]. Despite these recommendations, multiple factors seem to hamper its widespread clinical implementation [2]. As information on the actual implementation of cEEG, especially in Europe, is still scarcely available, identification and resolution of factors limiting its use remain difficult. Continuous electroencephalographic monitoring (cEEG) is the only available diagnostic tool for continuous monitoring of brain function in intensive care unit (ICU) patients. This study explores current practices of cEEG in adult Dutch ICU departments focusing on organizational and operational factors, development over time and factors perceived relevant for abstaining its use

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