THE IMPORTANCE OF ELECTROENCEPHALOGRAPHY IN DEVELOPING COMA AND BRAIN DEATH

Authors

  • Mamadaliyev Boburjon Odiljon o’g’li Student of Central Asian Medical University

Keywords:

Coma, ischemic stroke, intracerebral hemorrhage, traumatic brain injury, hypoxic encephalopathy, metabolic status, brain death.

Abstract

Electroencephalography (EEG) has long been used in evaluating comatose patients, and is being increasingly found to uncover patterns of prognostic significance, reveal subclinical seizure activity and provide data during treatment in which patients are paralyzed. Some EEG patterns reveal increasing degrees of cerebral compromise with progressive slowing of the background frequencies, while others can be explored for reactivity to external stimuli for prognostic purposes. With some etiologies, particular patterns carry grave import such as flat or highly suppressed patterns, or unreactive alpha, delta or burst-suppression patterns. Others including beta and triphasic patterns may herald a good prognosis, depending on cause.

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Published

2025-02-25

How to Cite

Mamadaliyev Boburjon Odiljon o’g’li. (2025). THE IMPORTANCE OF ELECTROENCEPHALOGRAPHY IN DEVELOPING COMA AND BRAIN DEATH. Web of Medicine: Journal of Medicine, Practice and Nursing, 3(2), 435–438. Retrieved from http://webofjournals.com/index.php/5/article/view/3402

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Section

Articles