Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT01946802

Seizure Detection Using SEDline During Therapeutic Hypothermia in Cardiac Arrest Victims

Trial of Device for Seizure Detection Using SEDline During Therapeutic Hypothermia in Cardiac Arrest Victims

Status
Completed
Phase
Study type
Observational
Enrollment
39 (actual)
Sponsor
Gil Joon Suh · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

Current guidelines recommend the use of sedatives and neuromuscular blocking agents to avoid shivering during therapeutic hypothermia in cardiac arrest victims. Therefore, it is difficult to detect seizure and the frequent or continuous EEG monitoring is recommended. However, it is difficult to follow this recommendation in most clinical situations due to the lack of specialized devices and persons. The purpose of this study is whether SEDline (frontal 4-channel EEG device) has a diagnostic value to detect seizure during therapeutic hypothermia in cardiac arrest victims.

Detailed description

1. Treatment of cardiac arrest victims Enrolled patients receive basic and advanced cardiac life support according to the 2010 American Heart Association (AHA) Guidelines for Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation (CPR) and Emergency Cardiovascular Care (ECC). After acquiring sustained return of spontaneous circulation (ROSC), the patients are immediately admitted to the ICU and are provided postresuscitation care including mild therapeutic hypothermia for 24 hours post-ROSC. During therapeutic hypothermia, their core temperatures are maintained from 32 to 34°C. Then rewarming is conducted (\< 0.25°C/hour) till core temperature 36.5°C. To avoid shivering, we use sedatives and neuromuscular blocking agents during the therapeutic hypothermia. 2. Conventional EEG Conventional EEG is conducted for 30 minutes at 1\) During therapeutic hypothermia and rewarming (within 72 hours after cardiac arrest) Then, the results are interpreted by a neurologist for the presence of seizure. 3. SEDline SEDline is monitored during the simultaneous period with the conventional EEG. Data retrieved from the SEDline are blindly interpreted by 3 investigators to determine the presence of seizure activity. The presence of seizure activity in SEDline is determined by the definition 1. Electrographic seizure: rhythmic discharge or spike and wave pattern with definite evolution in frequency, location, or morphology lasting several seconds. 2. Spike: Transient, clearly distinguishable from background activity, with pointed peak at conventional paper speeds and a duration of 20 to less than 70 ms 4. Anti-epileptic drug The use of anti-epileptic drugs is guided by the results of conventional EEG or the presence of clinically seizure-like movement 5. Gold standard The presence of Seizure identified in conventional EEG. 6. Primary outcome The diagnostic performance of SEDline to detect seizure will be tested: Sensitivity, specificity, positive predictive value, negative predictive value, accuracy, and area under receiver operating characteristics curve (AUC).

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
DEVICEFrontal 4 channel EEGSimultaneous conventional EEG and SEDline monitoring for 30 minutes during and after therapeutic hypothermia

Timeline

Start date
2014-12-01
Primary completion
2016-10-01
Completion
2016-10-01
First posted
2013-09-20
Last updated
2021-03-23
Results posted
2021-03-23

Locations

1 site across 1 country: South Korea

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT01946802. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.