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  Vol. 66 No. 6, June 2009 TABLE OF CONTENTS
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How Seizure Detection by Continuous Electroencephalographic Monitoring Affects the Prescribing of Antiepileptic Medications

Ronan D. Kilbride, MD, MRCPI; Daniel J. Costello, MD, MRCPI; Keith H. Chiappa, MD

Arch Neurol. 2009;66(6):723-728.

Objectives  To assess the effect of continuous electroencephalographic monitoring on the decision to treat seizures in the inpatient setting, particularly in the intensive care unit.

Design  Retrospective cohort study.

Setting  Medical and neuroscience intensive care units and neurological wards.

Patients  Three hundred consecutive nonelective continuous electroencephalographic monitoring studies, performed on 287 individual inpatients over a 27-month period.

Main Outcome Measures  Epileptiform electroencephalographic abnormalities and changes in antiepileptic drug (AED) therapy based on the electroencephalographic findings.

Results  The findings from the continuous electroencephalographic monitoring led to a change in AED prescribing in 52% of all studies with initiation of an AED therapy in 14%, modification of AED therapy in 33%, and discontinuation of AED therapy in 5% of all studies. Specifically, the detection of electrographic seizures led to a change in AED therapy in 28% of all studies.

Conclusions  The findings of continuous electroencephalographic monitoring resulted in a change in AED prescribing during or after half of the studies performed. Most AED changes were made as a result of the detection of electrographic seizures.


Author Affiliations: Epilepsy and Clinical Neurophysiology Services, Department of Neurology, Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston.



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