Bedside functional brain imaging in critically-ill children using high-density EEG source modeling and multi-modal sensory stimulation

Acute brain injury is a common cause of death and critical illness in children and young adults. Fundamental management focuses on early characterization of the extent of injury and optimizing recovery by preventing secondary damage during the days following the primary injury. Currently, bedside te...

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Published inNeuroImage clinical Vol. 12; no. C; pp. 198 - 211
Main Authors Eytan, Danny, Pang, Elizabeth W, Doesburg, Sam M, Nenadovic, Vera, Gavrilovic, Bojan, Laussen, Peter, Guerguerian, Anne-Marie
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Netherlands Elsevier 01.01.2016
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Summary:Acute brain injury is a common cause of death and critical illness in children and young adults. Fundamental management focuses on early characterization of the extent of injury and optimizing recovery by preventing secondary damage during the days following the primary injury. Currently, bedside technology for measuring neurological function is mainly limited to using electroencephalography (EEG) for detection of seizures and encephalopathic features, and evoked potentials. We present a proof of concept study in patients with acute brain injury in the intensive care setting, featuring a bedside functional imaging set-up designed to map cortical brain activation patterns by combining high density EEG recordings, multi-modal sensory stimulation (auditory, visual, and somatosensory), and EEG source modeling. Use of source-modeling allows for examination of spatiotemporal activation patterns at the cortical region level as opposed to the traditional scalp potential maps. The application of this system in both healthy and brain-injured participants is demonstrated with modality-specific source-reconstructed cortical activation patterns. By combining stimulation obtained with different modalities, most of the cortical surface can be monitored for changes in functional activation without having to physically transport the subject to an imaging suite. The results in patients in an intensive care setting with anatomically well-defined brain lesions suggest a topographic association between their injuries and activation patterns. Moreover, we report the reproducible application of a protocol examining a higher-level cortical processing with an auditory oddball paradigm involving presentation of the patient's own name. This study reports the first successful application of a bedside functional brain mapping tool in the intensive care setting. This application has the potential to provide clinicians with an additional dimension of information to manage critically-ill children and adults, and potentially patients not suited for magnetic resonance imaging technologies.
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Administrative and mailing address: The Hospital for Sick Children, Department of Critical Care, Second Floor Atrium, Room 2830-A, 555 University Avenue, Toronto, Ontario, Canada, M5X 1G8.
Laboratory address: Peter Gilgan Centre for Research and Learning, 686 Bay Street, 8th Floor South, 08.9709, Toronto, Ontario, Canada, M5G 0 A4.
ISSN:2213-1582
2213-1582
DOI:10.1016/j.nicl.2016.06.021