Resuscitation Plus (Mar 2024)

The capacity of neurological pupil index to predict the absence of somatosensory evoked potentials after cardiac arrest – An observational study

  • Meena Thuccani,
  • Sara Joelsson,
  • Linus Lilja,
  • Axel Strålin,
  • Josefin Nilsson,
  • Petra Redfors,
  • Araz Rawshani,
  • Johan Herlitz,
  • Peter Lundgren,
  • Christian Rylander

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 17
p. 100567

Abstract

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Background: In neurologic prognostication of comatose survivors from cardiac arrest, two independent predictors of poor outcome are the loss of the Pupillary light reflex (PLR) and the loss of the N20 response from Somatosensory Evoked potentials (SSEP). The PLR can be quantitatively assessed by pupillometry. Both tests depend on the midbrain, in which a dysfunction reflects a severe hypoxic injury. We reasoned that a certain level of defective PLR would be predictive of a bilaterally absent SSEP N20 response. Method: Neurological Pupil index (NPi) from the pupillometry and the SSEP N20 response were registered >48 h after cardiac arrest in comatose survivors. Clinical data were retrospectively analyzed. A receiver operating characteristic curve was used to evaluate the capacity of NPi to predict bilaterally absent SSEP N20 response. An NPi threshold value resulting in 48 hours after cardiac arrest predicted bilateral loss of the SSEP N20 response with a FPR < 5%. If validated in a larger cohort, an NPi threshold may be clinically applied in settings where SSEP is unavailable.

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