Recent Submissions

  • The role of processed electroencephalography in the detection and management of acute cerebral ischemia: A scoping review

    Mankoo, Alex; Bath, Philip M.; Barley, Mark; Dhillon, Permesh Singh; Malik, Luqman; Krishnan, Kailash (2025)
    Processed electroencephalography (pEEG) is increasingly used to titrate the depth of anesthesia. Whether such intra-procedural pEEG monitoring can offer additional information on cerebral perfusion or acute focal or global cerebral ischemia is unknown. This scoping review aimed to provide a narrative analysis of the current literature reporting the potential role of pEEG in adults with acute cerebral ischemia. In keeping with the scoping review methodology, a broad search strategy was defined, including descriptions of encephalography in acute ischemic stroke, carotid endarterectomy, cardiac surgery, and cardiac arrest. Additional screening of citations was conducted by 2 independent assessors. From 310 records, 28 full-text articles met inclusion criteria. Most identified studies were observational in design, and described the diagnostic ability of pEEG to identify cerebral hypoperfusion or its prognostic sensitivity after stroke or carotid surgery. No studies were identified that evaluated pEEG in the specific setting of endovascular therapy for acute ischemic stroke. Low sensitivity associations between pEEG indices and cerebral blood flow were highlighted, which may be influenced by cerebral autoregulatory thresholds. Despite the associations reported in observational studies, this review identified significant uncertainty in the role of pEEG during cerebral ischemia. There is a paucity of high-level observational (cohort or case-control) or randomized trial research examining the possible role of pEEG for the detection and management of cerebral ischemia during acute stroke, including during endovascular therapy, or in other common scenarios of acute cerebral ischemia.Copyright © 2025 The Author(s). Published by Wolters Kluwer Health, Inc.
  • Airway management outside the operating room: How to better prepare

    Beed, Martin (2017)
    Airway management outside the operating room is associated with increased risks compared with airway management inside the operating room. Moreover, airway management-whether in the intensive care unit, emergency department, interventional radiology suite, or general wards-often requires mastery of not only the anatomically difficult airway but also the physiologically and situationally difficult airway. The 2015 Difficult Airway Society Guidelines encourage the airway team to "stop and think". This article provides a practical review of how that evidence applies during emergency airway management outside of the operating room. To counter the challenges of airway management outside the operating room, we offer a mnemonic that combines both technical and non-technical insights summarized using the seven letters of the word PREPARE (P: pre-oxygenate/position; R: reset/resist; E: examine/explicit; P: plan A/B; A: adjust/attention; R: remain/review; E: exit/explore). We hope it can unite potentially disparate personnel with a structure that allows them to make acute decisions, coordinate action, and communicate unequivocally. This multidisciplinary publication also hopes to encourage common understanding and language between anesthesiologists and non-anesthesiologists about the perils of airway management outside the operating room and the importance of airway teamwork.