Quantitative EEG During Critical Illness Correlates with Patterns of Long-Term Cognitive Impairment

Clin EEG Neurosci. 2022 Sep;53(5):435-442. doi: 10.1177/1550059420978009. Epub 2020 Dec 8.

Abstract

Objective: Many intensive care unit (ICU) survivors suffer disabling long-term cognitive impairment (LTCI) after critical illness. We compared EEG characteristics during critical illness with patients' 1-year neuropsychological outcomes.

Methods: We performed a post hoc analysis of patients in the BRAIN-ICU study who had undergone EEG for clinical purposes during admission (n = 10). All survivors underwent formal cognitive assessments at 12-month follow-up. We evaluated EEGs by conventional visual inspection and computed 10 quantitative features. We explored associations between EEG and patterns of LTCI using Wilcoxon rank-sum tests and Spearman's rank correlations.

Results: Of 521 Vanderbilt patients enrolled in the parent study, 24 had EEG recordings during admission. Ten survivors had EEG tracings available and completed follow-up cognitive testing. All but one inpatient EEG showed generalized background slowing. All patients demonstrated cognitive impairment in at least one domain at follow-up. The most common deficits occurred in delayed memory (DM-median index 62) and visuospatial/constructional (VC-median index 69) domains. Relative alpha power correlated with VC score (ρ = 0.78, P = .008). Peak interhemispheric coherence correlated negatively with DM (ρ = -0.81, P = .018).

Conclusions: Quantitative EEG features during critical illness correlated with domain-specific cognitive performance in our small cohort of ICU survivors. Further study in larger prospective cohorts is required to determine whether these relationships hold.

Significance: EEG may serve as a prognostic biomarker predicting patterns of long-term cognitive impairment.

Keywords: cognition; critical care; delirium; dementia; electroencephalography; quantitative EEG.

MeSH terms

  • Cognition Disorders* / diagnosis
  • Cognitive Dysfunction* / diagnosis
  • Critical Illness / psychology
  • Electroencephalography
  • Humans
  • Intensive Care Units
  • Prospective Studies