Prediction by the Synek Score of Poor Neurological Outcome in Postanoxic Comatose Patients Treated With Induced Hypothermia Clinical Trial
Official title:
The Performance of the Synek Score to Predict Poor Neurological Outcome in Postanoxic Comatose Patients Treated With Induced Hypothermia
Resuscitated cardiac arrest (CA) is a frequent cause of admission in intensive care unit (ICU). Neurological state of postanoxic comatose patients can evolve either towards the absence of awakening or towards a more or less altered state of consciousness, ranging from the vegetative state to the full recovery of cognitive functions. Most of the deaths result from active withdrawal of life-sustaining treatment, based on poor neurological outcome prediction. Neurological prognostication needs therefore a multimodal approach based on reliable parameters, which should be easy to access and available at the early stage of care, in attempt to limit false poor outcome prognostication and help to not prolong futile active care in patient with severe post anoxic cerebral lesions. Nowadays the prediction of neurological outcome relies on a multimodal strategy including clinical examination, biomarkers and electroencephalography (Guidelines ESICM 2015). Early standard electroencephalography (EEG) is currently recommended and some features, notably absence of reactivity, status epilepticus or burst suppression after rewarming are strongly predictive of poor outcome. But those features require a precise analyze of the EEG usually performed by specialist. EEG patterns can be simplified and classified in five grades according to the Synek classification, ranging from dominant reactive alpha activity (grade 1) to isoelectric encephalogram (grade 5). Grade 1 and two are considering as good prognostic, grade 3 as intermediate and grade 4 to five as poor prognostic. Nevertheless, few data are available on the performance of this classification since generalization of TTM use. We hypothesize that a multimodal strategy combining clinical examination, NSE concentration and the Synek score would bring a high degree of prediction. We aimed to assess the performances of the combination of clinical examination, NSE analysed at 48-72h and the Synek score to predict hard outcome defined by a cerebral performance category (CPC) 3-5, in postanoxic comatose patients treated with induced hypothermia
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