The Benefit of Neuromuscular Blockade in Patients with Postanoxic Myoclonus Otherwise Obscuring Continuous Electroencephalography (CEEG)

Introduction. Myoclonus status epilepticus is independently associated with poor outcome in coma patients after cardiac arrest. Determining if myoclonus is of cortical origin on continuous electroencephalography (CEEG) can be difficult secondary to the muscle artifact obscuring the underlying CEEG....

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Main Authors: Christopher R. Newey, Alejandro Hornik, Meziane Guerch, Anantha Veripuram, Sushma Yerram, Agnieszka Ardelt
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Hindawi Limited 2017-01-01
Series:Critical Care Research and Practice
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2017/2504058
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spelling doaj-41ee1b68c830448db6077730f3104f5c2020-11-25T00:39:13ZengHindawi LimitedCritical Care Research and Practice2090-13052090-13132017-01-01201710.1155/2017/25040582504058The Benefit of Neuromuscular Blockade in Patients with Postanoxic Myoclonus Otherwise Obscuring Continuous Electroencephalography (CEEG)Christopher R. Newey0Alejandro Hornik1Meziane Guerch2Anantha Veripuram3Sushma Yerram4Agnieszka Ardelt5Department of Neurology, University of Missouri, 5 Hospital Drive, CE 540, Columbia, MO 65211, USASouthern Illinois Healthcare, 405 W. Jackson Street, Carbondale, IL 62902, USANovant Health Forsyth Medical Center, 3333 Silas Creek Parkway, Winston-Salem, NC 27103, USADepartment of Neurology, Texas Tech University Health Sciences Center-El Paso, 4615 Alameda Avenue, El Paso, TX 79905, USADepartment of Neurology, University of Missouri, 5 Hospital Drive, CE 540, Columbia, MO 65211, USADepartment of Neurology, The University of Chicago Medicine, 5841 S. Maryland Drive, MC2030, Chicago, IL 60637, USAIntroduction. Myoclonus status epilepticus is independently associated with poor outcome in coma patients after cardiac arrest. Determining if myoclonus is of cortical origin on continuous electroencephalography (CEEG) can be difficult secondary to the muscle artifact obscuring the underlying CEEG. The use of a neuromuscular blocker can be useful in these cases. Methods. Retrospective review of CEEG in patients with postanoxic myoclonus who received cisatracurium while being monitored. Results. Twelve patients (mean age: 53.3 years; 58.3% male) met inclusion criteria of clinical postanoxic myoclonus. The initial CEEG patterns immediately prior to neuromuscular blockade showed myoclonic artifact with continuous slowing (50%), burst suppression with myoclonic artifact (41.7%), and continuous myogenic artifact obscuring CEEG (8.3%). After intravenous administration of cisatracurium (0.1 mg–2 mg), reduction in artifact improved quality of CEEG recordings in 9/12 (75%), revealing previously unrecognized patterns: continuous EEG seizures (33.3%), lateralizing slowing (16.7%), burst suppression (16.7%), generalized periodic discharges (8.3%), and, in the patient who had an initially uninterpretable CEEG from myogenic artifact, continuous slowing. Conclusion. Short-acting neuromuscular blockade is useful in determining background cerebral activity on CEEG otherwise partially or completely obscured by muscle artifact in patients with postanoxic myoclonus. Fully understanding background cerebral activity is important in prognostication and treatment, particularly when there are underlying EEG seizures.http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2017/2504058
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Christopher R. Newey
Alejandro Hornik
Meziane Guerch
Anantha Veripuram
Sushma Yerram
Agnieszka Ardelt
spellingShingle Christopher R. Newey
Alejandro Hornik
Meziane Guerch
Anantha Veripuram
Sushma Yerram
Agnieszka Ardelt
The Benefit of Neuromuscular Blockade in Patients with Postanoxic Myoclonus Otherwise Obscuring Continuous Electroencephalography (CEEG)
Critical Care Research and Practice
author_facet Christopher R. Newey
Alejandro Hornik
Meziane Guerch
Anantha Veripuram
Sushma Yerram
Agnieszka Ardelt
author_sort Christopher R. Newey
title The Benefit of Neuromuscular Blockade in Patients with Postanoxic Myoclonus Otherwise Obscuring Continuous Electroencephalography (CEEG)
title_short The Benefit of Neuromuscular Blockade in Patients with Postanoxic Myoclonus Otherwise Obscuring Continuous Electroencephalography (CEEG)
title_full The Benefit of Neuromuscular Blockade in Patients with Postanoxic Myoclonus Otherwise Obscuring Continuous Electroencephalography (CEEG)
title_fullStr The Benefit of Neuromuscular Blockade in Patients with Postanoxic Myoclonus Otherwise Obscuring Continuous Electroencephalography (CEEG)
title_full_unstemmed The Benefit of Neuromuscular Blockade in Patients with Postanoxic Myoclonus Otherwise Obscuring Continuous Electroencephalography (CEEG)
title_sort benefit of neuromuscular blockade in patients with postanoxic myoclonus otherwise obscuring continuous electroencephalography (ceeg)
publisher Hindawi Limited
series Critical Care Research and Practice
issn 2090-1305
2090-1313
publishDate 2017-01-01
description Introduction. Myoclonus status epilepticus is independently associated with poor outcome in coma patients after cardiac arrest. Determining if myoclonus is of cortical origin on continuous electroencephalography (CEEG) can be difficult secondary to the muscle artifact obscuring the underlying CEEG. The use of a neuromuscular blocker can be useful in these cases. Methods. Retrospective review of CEEG in patients with postanoxic myoclonus who received cisatracurium while being monitored. Results. Twelve patients (mean age: 53.3 years; 58.3% male) met inclusion criteria of clinical postanoxic myoclonus. The initial CEEG patterns immediately prior to neuromuscular blockade showed myoclonic artifact with continuous slowing (50%), burst suppression with myoclonic artifact (41.7%), and continuous myogenic artifact obscuring CEEG (8.3%). After intravenous administration of cisatracurium (0.1 mg–2 mg), reduction in artifact improved quality of CEEG recordings in 9/12 (75%), revealing previously unrecognized patterns: continuous EEG seizures (33.3%), lateralizing slowing (16.7%), burst suppression (16.7%), generalized periodic discharges (8.3%), and, in the patient who had an initially uninterpretable CEEG from myogenic artifact, continuous slowing. Conclusion. Short-acting neuromuscular blockade is useful in determining background cerebral activity on CEEG otherwise partially or completely obscured by muscle artifact in patients with postanoxic myoclonus. Fully understanding background cerebral activity is important in prognostication and treatment, particularly when there are underlying EEG seizures.
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2017/2504058
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