Tuesday, March 22, 2022

The Prognostic Utility of Electroencephalography in Stroke Recovery: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis

 

Survivors don't care one whit about pronostication and failure to recovery prediction. Do something useful, create stroke rehab protocols that get survivors 100% recovered. That is the only stroke goal. NOT these fucking lazy prediction and pronostication researches.  This is all because we have NO STROKE LEADERSHIP.

The Prognostic Utility of Electroencephalography in Stroke Recovery: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis

First Published March 20, 2022 Review Article 

Improved ability to predict patient recovery would guide post-stroke care by helping clinicians personalize treatment and maximize outcomes. Electroencephalography (EEG) provides a direct measure of the functional neuroelectric activity in the brain that forms the basis for neuroplasticity and recovery, and thus may increase prognostic ability.

To examine evidence for the prognostic utility of EEG in stroke recovery via systematic review/meta-analysis.

Peer-reviewed journal articles that examined the relationship between EEG and subsequent clinical outcome(s) in stroke were searched using electronic databases. Two independent researchers extracted data for synthesis. Linear meta-regressions were performed across subsets of papers with common outcome measures to quantify the association between EEG and outcome.

75 papers were included. Association between EEG and clinical outcomes was seen not only early post-stroke, but more than 6 months post-stroke. The most studied prognostic potential of EEG was in predicting independence and stroke severity in the standard acute stroke care setting. The meta-analysis showed that EEG was associated with subsequent clinical outcomes measured by the Modified Rankin Scale, National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale, and Fugl-Meyer Upper Extremity Assessment (r = .72, .70, and .53 from 8, 13, and 12 papers, respectively). EEG improved prognostic abilities beyond prediction afforded by standard clinical assessments. However, the EEG variables examined were highly variable across studies and did not converge.

EEG shows potential to predict post-stroke recovery outcomes. However, evidence is largely explorative, primarily due to the lack of a definitive set of EEG measures to be used for prognosis.

 

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