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Journal Article

Citation

Michelson E, Huff JS, Garrett J, Naunheim R. J. Neurosci. Nurs. 2019; 51(2): 62-66.

Affiliation

J. Stephen Huff, MD, University of Virginia School of Medicine, Charlottesville, VA. John Garrett, MD, Baylor University Medical Center, Dallas, TX. Rosanne Naunheim, MD, Washington University Barnes Jewish Medical Center, St Louis, MO.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2019, American Association of Neuroscience Nurses)

DOI

10.1097/JNN.0000000000000420

PMID

30649089

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: Drug and alcohol (DA)-related emergency department (ED) visits represent an increasing fraction the head-injured population seen in the ED. Such patients present a challenge to the evaluation of head injury and determination of need for computed tomographic (CT) scan and further clinical path. This effort examined whether an electroencephalogram (EEG)-based biomarker could aid in reducing unnecessary CT scans in the intoxicated ED population.

METHOD: This is a retrospective secondary study of an independent prospective US Food and Drug Administration validation trial that demonstrated the efficacy of (1) an automatic Structural Injury Classifier for the likelihood of injury visible on a CT (CT+) and (2) an EEG-based Brain Function Index to assess functional impairment in minimally impaired, head-injured adults presenting within 3 days of injury. Impact on the biomarker performance in patients who presented with or without DA was studied.

RESULTS: Structural Injury Classifier sensitivity was not significantly impacted by the presence of DA. Although specificity decreased, it remained several times higher than obtained using standard CT decision rules. Furthermore, the potential to reduce the number of unnecessary scans by approximately 30% was demonstrated when the Structural Injury Classifier was integrated into CT clinical triage. The Brain Function Index was demonstrated to be independent of the presence of DA.

CONCLUSION: This EEG-based assessment technology used to identify the likelihood of structural or functional brain injury in mildly head-injured patients represents an objective way to aid in triage patients with DA on presentation, with the potential to decrease overscanning while not sacrificing sensitivity to injuries visible on CT.


Language: en

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