Short-Latency Positive Peak Following N20 Somatosensory Evoked Potential Is Superior to N20 in Predicting Neurologic Outcome After Out-of-Hospital Cardiac Arrest.

Journal: Critical Care Medicine
Published:
Abstract

Objectives: The absence of N20 somatosensory evoked potential after cardiac arrest is related to poor outcome. However, discrimination between the low-amplitude and the absence of N20 is challenging. P25 and P30 are short-latency positive peaks with latencies between 25 and 30 ms following N20 (P25/30). P25/30 is evident even with an ambiguous N20 in patients with good outcome. Therefore, we evaluated the predictive value of P25/30 after cardiac arrest.

Design: A retrospective observational study. Setting: University-affiliated hospital. Subjects: Comatose survivors after out-of-hospital cardiac arrest treated by hypothermic targeted temperature management. Intervention: None. Measurements and main

Results: The specificity and the positive predictive value of P25/30 and N20 in predicting poor outcome were the same, showing a rate of 100%. The sensitivity of P25/30 in predicting poor outcome (90.12% [95% CI, 81.5-95.6%]) was higher than that of N20 (70.37% [95% CI, 59.2-80%]). Also, the negative predictive value of P25/30 in predicting poor outcome (81.4% [95% CI, 69.4-89.4%]) was higher than that of N20 (59.3% [95% CI, 51-67.1%]). The P25/30-based adjusted model showed a larger area under the curve (0.98 [95% CI, 0.95-1]) compared with the N20-based adjusted model (0.95 [95% CI, 0.91-0.98]) (p = 0.02).

Conclusions: The absence of P25/30 is related to poor outcome with a higher sensitivity, negative predictive value than the absence of N20.

Authors
Sung Kim, Joo Oh, Jungtaek Park, Hyun Jeong, Ji Kim, Jung Wee, Sang Oh, Seung Choi, Kyu Park
Relevant Conditions

Cardiac Arrest