Descripción
Description
This new edition updates the definitive clinical atlas textbook on interpreting continuous amplitude-integrated electroencephalography monitoring in neonatal units. It presents a comprehensive instructive overview linking tracings, scans, neuroimaging, real-time tracing clips, and detailed clinical scenarios and is an invaluable guide to all those needing to learn how to use aEEG for the best and safest results. An online quiz is available to enhance training and performance.
This third edition of the aEEG atlas summarizes the experience and evidence of more than 40 years of aEEG monitoring in the newborn and also addresses the development and future of brain monitoring.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Foreword Geraldine Boylan PhD
1. Monitoring the newborn brain Lena Hellström Westas, Sampsa Vanhatalo, Linda de Vries
2. Brain activity and generation of EEG signal Sampsa Vanhatalo
3. Application of electrodes, recording caveats and artefacts Kathi Randall and Sampsa Vanhatalo
4. Seizures Mohamed El-Dib, Sampsa Vanhatalo, and Lena Hellström-Westas
5. Neonatal encephalopathy in the full-term infant due to hypoxia-ischemia and focal brain lesion
Linda S de Vries and Lena Hellström-Westas
Case 5.1: Full-term infant with mild HIE and slow recovery
Case 5.2: Mild encephalopathy with evolution to moderate encephalopathy
Case 5.3: Full-term infant, mild HIE with evolution to moderate HIE
Case 5.4: Full-term infant with moderate HIE and predominant Injury to the thalami
Case 5.5: Full-term infant with moderate HIE and predominant injury to the thalami
Case 5.6: Full-term infant with severe HIE after acute intrapartum event
Case 5.7:Full-term infant with postnatal collapse who was treated with hypothermia
Case 5.8: Full-term infant with Severe HIE
Case 5.9: Term infant with severe HIE following a sentinel event
Case 5.10: Late preterm infant with moderate asphyxia and rapid recovery
Case 5.11: Hemorrhage in the thalamus in a late preterm infant
Case 5.12: Full-term infant with a temporal lobe hemorrhage
Case 5.13: Full-term infant with a frontal lobe hemorrhage
Case 5.14: Full-term infant with transposition of the great arteries and a large subdural hemorrhage
Case 5.15: Full-term infant with Cortical stroke
Case 5.16: Full-term infant with posterior branch MCA
Case 5.17: Full-term infant with MCA stroke
Case 5.18: Full-term infant with cerebral sinovenous thrombosis
6. Neonatal encephalopathy due to infections, metabolic disorders and genetic causes
Linda S de Vries andSonia Bonifacio
Case 6.1: Full-term infant with hypoglycemia due to insulinoma
Case 6.2: Full-term infant with hypoglycemia
Case 6.3: Full-term neonate with Molybdenum cofactor deficiency
Case 6.4: Ornithine transcarbamylase (OTC) deficiency
Case 6.5: Full-term infant with Non-Ketotic Hyperglycinaemia
Case 6.6: Pyridoxine-responsive and pyridoxine-dependent seizures
Case 6.7: Full-term infant with a peroxisomal disorder
Case 6.8: Full-term infant with acute bilirubin encephalopathy
Case 6.9: Full-term infant with Group B streptococcus meningitis
Case 6.10: Full-term infant with HSV Meningoencephalitis
Case 6.11: Late preterm infant with Rotavirus associated encephalitis
Case 6.12: Full-term infant with Incontinentia Pigmenti
Case 6.13: Full-term infant with Hemimegalencephaly
Case 6.14: Hemimegalencephaly
Case 6.15: Full-term infant with cortical malformation
Case 6.16: Full-term infant with channelopathy
Case 6.17: Full-term infant with Developmental and epileptic encephalopathy (DEE)
Case 6.18: Full-term infant with Intracranial tumor (teratoma)
7. The preterm aEEG
Lena Hellström Westas
Case 7.1: Preterm infant with grade III intraventricular hemorrhage and posthemorrhagic ventricular dilatation
Case 7.2: Severe IVH/PVHI and Refractory Seizures
Case 7.3: Very Preterm infant with severe asphyxia
Case 7.4: Preterm infant with severe intrapartum asphyxia
Case 7.5: Vein of Galen malformation in late preterm infant
Case 7.6: Encephalitis with Bacillus cereus in a preterm infant
8. Other EEG trends and computational measures
Sampsa Vanhatalo
9. Advancing Neonatal Neurocritical Care with Brain Monitoring
Sonia Bonifacio
Case 9.1: Term infant with congenital heart defect
Case 9.2: Preterm infant with pericardial effusion, severe metabolic acidosis, and brain injury
Case 9.3: Multimodal monitoring in a preterm infant
Case 9.4: Full-term infant with progressing mild to moderate encephalopathy with seizures
Biography
Lena Hellström-Westas, MD, PhD, is Professor of Perinatal Medicine, Department of Women’s and Children’s Health, Uppsala University and University Hospital, Uppsala, Sweden.
Linda S de Vries, MD, PhD, is Emeritus Professor of Neonatal Neurology at Utrecht and Leiden University Medical Center, The Netherlands.
Sampsa Vanhatalo, MD, PhD, is Professor, Departments of Physiology and Clinical Neurophysiology, Children’s Hospital, Helsinki University Hospital and Univeristy of Helsinki, Finland






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