E. Gutling et al., PROGNOSTIC VALUE OF FRONTAL AND PARIETAL SOMATOSENSORY-EVOKED POTENTIALS IN SEVERE HEAD-INJURY - A LONG-TERM FOLLOW-UP-STUDY, Electroencephalography and clinical neurophysiology, 92(6), 1994, pp. 568-570
We have shown that the combined analysis of the frontal and parietal s
omatosensory evoked response (SEP) improves the global short-term outc
ome prediction in severe head injury (SHI) after 3-6 months. In the pr
esent study the same patients were reexamined 18 months after trauma a
nd the prognostic value of the combined SEP parameters reassessed, in
particular their value of predicting the exact Glasgow Outcome Scale (
GOS) class reached (as opposed to a crude good or bad distinction). Fr
ontal (P20/22, N30) and parietal (N20) SEP components were studied in
50 patients within 72 h after the injury and were related to the GOS a
fter 3-6 months and again after 18 months. When both frontal and parie
tal components were used as predictors, discriminant analysis correctl
y classified 76% of the patients after 3-6 months and 82% after 18 mon
ths. Considering parietal SEP alone, classification was less accurate
(74% after 3-6 months, and 68% after 18 months) and misclassifications
were more severe. Our results show that (i) a combined analysis of fr
ontal and parietal components of the SEP improves and refines the outc
ome prediction in SHI, (ii) the predictive power of the combined appro
ach increases with time after trauma, while that of the parietal respo
nse alone decreases.