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The goal of this observational study is to compare clinical utility between Remote EEG Monitoring (REMI) and conventional EEG in patients (6 and older) that are undergoing EEG recording in a hospital as part of their routine clinical care. The main question[s] it aims to answer are:
Participants will wear REMI and conventional EEG electrodes at the same time.
Full description
Epitel has developed Epilog, a wireless wearable EEG sensor capable of transmitting EEG to a recording, display, and review platform called REMI (Remote EEG Monitoring). Epitel's REMI platform consists of the REMI tablet and four Epilog sensors. The REMI tablet requires connection to secure WiFi access, and Emergency Department and Intensive Critical Care's IT to open access to http://remi.epitel.com. The four epilog sensors communicate directly with the REMI tablet via Bluetooth connection. REMI synchronizes four Epilog sensors placed by hospital Emergency Department (ED) or intensive care unit (ICU) staff within minutes of patient arrival, thus allowing patients who are suspected of having encephalopathy to be evaluated quickly and prior to initial treatment. REMI securely transmits EEG data to its cloud server where data are processed in near real time using Persyst® Mobile software. Data can then be remotely reviewed by clinical team members.
The objective of this protocol is to demonstrate clinical utility of the Epilog EEG sensors with the REMI monitoring platform in children age 6 through adults in the pediatric emergency department and neurocritical care unit, respectively. Patients meeting entry criteria will be enrolled by a bedside clinical team member who is trained in Epilog sensor placement and use of the REMI platform. All participants will have four Epilog sensors placed, in addition to the standard of care full-EEG. The bedside clinician will be asked to make a "baseline" diagnosis based only on the clinical symptoms.
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129 participants in 1 patient group
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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