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OBJECTIVE: To identify patients most likely to have seizures documented on continuous EEG (cEEG) monitoring and patients who require more prolonged cEEG to record the first seizure. METHODS: Five hundred seventy consecutive patients who underwent cEEG monitoring over a 6.5-year period were reviewed for the detection of subclinical seizures or evaluation of unexplained decrease in level of consciousness. Baseline demographic, clinical, and EEG findings were recorded and a multivariate logistic regression analysis performed to identify factors associated with 1) any EEG seizure activity and 2) first seizure detected after >24 hours of monitoring. RESULTS: Seizures were detected in 19% (n = 110) of patients who underwent cEEG monitoring; the seizures were exclusively nonconvulsive in 92% (n = 101) of these patients. Among patients with seizures, 89% (n = 98) were in intensive care units at the time of monitoring. Electrographic seizures were associated with coma (odds ratio OR 7.7, 95% CI 4.2 to 14.2), age 24 hours of monitoring (20% vs 5% of noncomatose patients; OR 4.5, p = 0.018). CONCLUSIONS: CEEG monitoring detected seizure activity in 19% of patients, and the seizures were almost always nonconvulsive. Coma, age 24 hours of monitoring to detect the first electrographic seizure.
Claassen et al. (Tue,) studied this question.