A quantitative EEG index for the recognition of arterial ischemic stroke in children.
Publication/Presentation Date
12-1-2023
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: To describe and assess performance of the Correlate Of Injury to the Nervous system (COIN) index, a quantitative electroencephalography (EEG) metric designed to identify areas of cerebral dysfunction concerning for stroke.
METHODS: Case-control study comparing continuous EEG data from children with acute ischemic stroke to children without stroke, with or without encephalopathy. COIN is calculated continuously and compares EEG power between cerebral hemispheres. Stroke relative infarct volume (RIV) was calculated from quantitative neuroimaging analysis. Significance was determined using a two-sample t-test. Sensitivity, specificity, and accuracy were measured using logistic regression.
RESULTS: Average COIN values were -34.7 in the stroke cohort compared to -9.5 in controls without encephalopathy (p = 0.003) and -10.5 in controls with encephalopathy (p = 0.006). The optimal COIN cutoff to discriminate stroke from controls was -15 in non-encephalopathic and -18 in encephalopathic controls with >92% accuracy in strokes with RIV > 5%. A COIN cutoff of -20 allowed discrimination between strokes with < 5% and >5% RIV (p = 0.027).
CONCLUSIONS: We demonstrate that COIN can identify children with acute ischemic stroke.
SIGNIFICANCE: COIN may be a valuable tool for stroke identification in children. Additional studies are needed to determine utility as a monitoring technique for children at risk for stroke.
Volume
156
First Page
113
Last Page
124
ISSN
1872-8952
Published In/Presented At
Caffarelli, M., Karukonda, V., Aghaeeaval, M., McQuillen, P. S., Numis, A. L., Mackay, M. T., Press, C. A., Wintermark, M., Fox, C. K., Amorim, E., & SIPS Investigators (2023). A quantitative EEG index for the recognition of arterial ischemic stroke in children. Clinical neurophysiology : official journal of the International Federation of Clinical Neurophysiology, 156, 113–124. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.clinph.2023.10.001
Disciplines
Medicine and Health Sciences | Pediatrics
PubMedID
37918222
Department(s)
Department of Pediatrics
Document Type
Article