par Jing, Jin;Ge, Wendong;Struck, Aaron F;Fernandes, Marta Bento;Hong, Shenda;An, Sungtae;Fatima, Safoora;Herlopian, Aline;Karakis, Ioannis;Halford, Jonathan J.J.;Ng, Marcus C;Johnson, Emily L;Appavu, Brian L;Sarkis, Rani A;Osman, Gamaleldin;Kaplan, Peter W;Dhakar, Monica B;Jayagopal, Lakshman Arcot;Sheikh, Zubeda;Taraschenko, Olga;Schmitt, Sarah S.E.;Haider, Hiba Arif;Kim, Jennifer Ahjin;Swisher, Christa B;Gaspard, Nicolas ;Cervenka, Mackenzie MC;Rodriguez Ruiz, Andres A;Lee, Jong Woo;Tabaeizadeh, Mohammad;Gilmore, Emily Jean;Nordstrom, Kristy;Yoo, Ji Yeoun;Holmes, Manisha G;Herman, Susan T;Williams, Jennifer A;Pathmanathan, Jay;Nascimento, Fábio A;Fan, Ziwei;Nasiri, Samaneh;Shafi, Mouhsin M.M.;Cash, Sydney S.S.;Hoch, Daniel Brian;Cole, Andrew J;Rosenthal, Eric S;Zafar, Sahar F;Sun, Jimeng;Westover, Michael Brandon
Référence Neurology, 100, 17, page (e1737-e1749)
Publication Publié, 2023-04
Référence Neurology, 100, 17, page (e1737-e1749)
Publication Publié, 2023-04
Article révisé par les pairs
Résumé : | The validity of brain monitoring using electroencephalography (EEG), particularly to guide care in patients with acute or critical illness, requires that experts can reliably identify seizures and other potentially harmful rhythmic and periodic brain activity, collectively referred to as "ictal-interictal-injury continuum" (IIIC). Previous interrater reliability (IRR) studies are limited by small samples and selection bias. This study was conducted to assess the reliability of experts in identifying IIIC. |