A major miss in prognostication after cardiac arrest: Burst suppression and brain healing
Becker, Danielle A; Schiff, Nicholas D; Becker, Lance B; Holmes, Manisha G; Fins, Joseph J; Horowitz, James M; Devinsky, Orrin
We report a case with therapeutic hypothermia after cardiac arrest where meaningful recovery far exceeded anticipated negative endpoints following cardiac arrest with loss of brainstem reflexes and subsequent status epilepticus. This man survived and recovered after an out-of-hospital cardiac arrest followed by a 6-week coma with absent motor responses and 5 weeks of burst suppression. Standard criteria suggested no chance of recovery. His recovery may relate to the effect of burst-suppression on EEG to rescue neurons near neuronal cell death. Further research to understand the mechanisms of therapeutic hypothermia and late restoration of neuronal functional capacity may improve prediction and aid end-of-life decisions after cardiac arrest.
PMCID:5198796
PMID: 28053858
ISSN: 2213-3232
CID: 2386742
A retrospective study of the efficacy and tolerability of Zonisamide in the treatment of epilepsy in patients with mental retardation and developmental disabilities [Meeting Abstract]
Lau, C; McBride, AE; Holmes, M; Ettinger, AB
ISI:000224420100910
ISSN: 0013-9580
CID: 5356282
Orientation class for epilepsy patients going for video eeg monitoring : an effective teaching tool [Meeting Abstract]
Loughlin, J; Hamberger, S; Holmes, M; Schoenberg, LG; Ettinger, Alan B
ORIGINAL:0016250
ISSN: 1528-1167
CID: 5362122