EEG findings and clinical prognostic factors associated with mortality in a prospective cohort of inpatients with COVID-19
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Skorin, Ilona
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EEG findings and clinical prognostic factors associated with mortality in a prospective cohort of inpatients with COVID-19
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Purpose: Our objective is to describe the most prevalent electroencephalographic findings in COVID-19 hospitalized patients, and to determine possible predictors of mortality including EEG and clinical variables.
Methods: A multicentric prospective observational study in patients with COVID-19 requiring EEG during hospitalization.
Results: We found 94 EEG from 62 patients (55 % men, mean age 59.7 +/- 17.8 years) were analyzed. Most frequent comorbidity was cardiac (52 %), followed by metabolic (45 %) and CNS disease (39 %). Patients required ICU management by 60 %, with a mortality of 27 % in the whole cohort. The most frequent EEG finding was generalized continuous slow-wave activity (66 %). Epileptic activity was observed in 19 % including non-convulsive status epilepticus, seizures and interictal epileptiform discharges. Periodic patterns were observed in 3 patients (3.2 %). Multivariate analysis found that cancer comorbidity and requiring an EEG during the third week of evolution portended a higher risk of mortality
Conclusion: We observed that the most prevalent EEG finding in this cohort was generalized continuous slow-wave activity, while epileptic activity was observed in less than 20 % of the cases. Mortality risk factors were comorbidity with cancer and requiring an EEG during the third week of evolution, possibly related to the hyperinflammatory state.
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Seizure: European Journal of Epilepsy 83 (2020) 1–4
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