Delirium Detection Using Point-of-Care Single-Channel EEG: A Pilot Study
Rebecca Heinze, Tage Runkle, Yvonne Larson-Smith, Emma Behnken, Gen Shinozaki, Allyson Palmer

TL;DR
This pilot study explores a portable EEG device for detecting delirium in hospitalized older adults, showing it outperforms traditional screening methods.
Contribution
The study introduces a point-of-care single-channel EEG device as a novel, non-invasive delirium screening tool.
Findings
BSEEG scores were significantly higher in delirium-positive patients compared to delirium-negative patients.
A BSEEG threshold of 1.5 achieved 77.78% sensitivity for delirium detection.
Traditional clinical screenings failed to detect any true delirium cases in this study.
Abstract
Delirium is a common yet underdiagnosed medical emergency involving acute deficits in cognition and attention. It affects over 20% of hospitalized patients and up to 80% of ICU patients, with increased prevalence in older adults. Delirium is associated with increased mortality, prolonged hospitalization, long-term cognitive decline, and substantial healthcare costs. However, current screening tools are subjective and difficult to implement consistently. Traditional EEGs show diagnostic utility; however, they are costly and require specialized interpretation. We conducted a prospective pilot study evaluating a point-of-care, single-channel EEG device for delirium detection in hospitalized older adults. EEG spectra were utilized to calculate a ‘bispectral EEG’ (BSEEG) score reflecting the ratio of slow to fast brain waves. Twenty-two postoperative patients (mean age 75; 59.09% female)…
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Taxonomy
TopicsIntensive Care Unit Cognitive Disorders · Anesthesia and Sedative Agents · Healthcare Technology and Patient Monitoring
