5/30/2023 0 Comments Pupil measurementA study published in Neurocritical Care found that automated pupillometry is more reliable than standard clinical assessments in detecting and tracking subtle changes in cerebral edema and pupillary reactivity during osmotic therapy. A case study series published in the Journal of Neuroscience of Nursing revealed that automated infrared pupillometry is an accurate tool that provides reliable data in patients with a poor baseline neurological examination after stroke. Clinical Neurology and Neurosurgery published a study that found that intracerebral hemorrhage volume and shift of midline structures correlate with NPi, and abnormalities in NPi can be predicted by hematoma volume and other CT indicators of ICH severity.The NPi and automated pupillometry have recently been included in the updated 2020 American Heart Association (AHA) Guidelines for Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation (CPR) and Emergency Cardiovascular Care (ECC) as an object measurement supporting brain injury prognosis in patients following cardiac arrest. According to the new American Heart Association (AHA) guidelines, most deaths attributable to post-cardiac arrest brain injury are due to active withdrawal of life-sustaining treatment based on a predicted poor neurological outcome.More than 100 studies published in peer-reviewed academic journals indicate the effectiveness of automated pupillometry and the NPi scale for use in critical care medicine, neurology, neurosurgery, emergency medicine, and applied research settings. The numeric scale of the NPi allows for a more rigorous interpretation and classification of the pupil response than subjective assessment.Īutomated pupillometer (NPi-300 by NeurOptics, Inc.) Pupil reactivity is express numerically so that changes in both pupil size and reactivity can be trended over time, just like other vital signs. A patient's pupil measurement (including variables such as size, latency, constriction velocity, dilation velocity, etc.) is obtained using a pupillometer, and the measurement is compared against a normative model of pupil reaction to light and automatically graded by the NPi on a scale of 0 to 4.9. The Neurological Pupil index, or NPi, is an algorithm developed by NeurOptics, Inc., that removes subjectivity from the pupillary evaluation. These terms are subjective and applied without a standard clinical protocol or definition. The pupil's reaction is numerically graded, typically on scales from one to three, to translate how brisk the pupillary reflex is. The pupil should dilate again when the light is moved away.
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