Affiliation:
1. Department of Pediatric Critical Care Medicine, Saitama Medical Center Saitama Medical University Saitama Japan
2. Department of Pediatrics Saitama Medical University Saitama Japan
Abstract
AbstractBackgroundEarly treatment may improve the prognosis of acute encephalopathy (AE). However, methods for early diagnosis have not yet been established. In this paper, we examined methods for the early diagnosis of AE.MethodsWe extracted data on patients with febrile status epilepticus from the electronic medical records in our department between March 2016 and April 2021. Among these, 79 patients who underwent continuous electroencephalography (cEEG) were included in this study. Patients who exhibited psychomotor retardation or abnormal brain magnetic resonance imaging findings were assigned to Group E (n = 20), and the remaining patients were the control group (Group C, n = 59). The following tests were compared retrospectively between these two groups on admission: cEEG, serum hepatic function tests, and blood coagulation tests.ResultsThe percentage of patients who exhibited high‐amplitude slow waves or flat waves on cEEG at the time of admission was statistically significantly higher in Group E than in Group C (p < 0.01). Moreover, the percentage of patients whose high‐amplitude slow waves or flat brain waves on admission disappeared within 6 h after an initial episode of convulsion was statistically significantly lower in Group E than in Group C (p < 0.01). Furthermore, all the items in the coagulation and the hepatic function tests were statistically significantly different in Group E from those in Group C (p < 0.05).ConclusionThese results showed that cEEG together with hepatic function and coagulation tests may be useful for the differential diagnosis of AE.
Subject
Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health