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Can EEG and machine learning predict respiratory difficulties in Covid19 patients?

Researchers are planning to investigate severe respiratory problems in coronavirus patients with EEG and machine learning, to help to predict the need of intensive care treatment of other COVID19 patients.
Kuva: Adolfo Vera.
Photo: Adolfo Vera

In the most serious cases of coronavirus infection, vital body functions can fail either slowly or suddenly. In both situations intensive care is essential, but current possibilities in recognizing patients who ultimately end up in intensive care are limited. Early identification of high-risk patients and the possible upgrading of treatment can, in the best of cases, prevent respiratory problems from getting worse. 

HUS Helsinki University Hospital is launching a study together with Aalto University to see if serious respiratory problems among coronavirus patients can be predicted by using electroencephalography (EEG). 

鈥極ur research may show if the disease can directly affect the respiratory centre of the central nervous system, thus contributing to the development of serious breathing difficulties. Our ultimate aim is to find patients at risk of developing respiratory difficulties before the symptoms set in, and to direct them to intensive care in time鈥, says Hanna Renvall, head of the BioMag laboratory at the HUS Diagnostic Center.

Using EEG to find biomarkers

The two-year study will begin in January 2021. The researchers will  record EEGs in coronavirus patients who suffer from a shortage of oxygen and those who do not, and compare them with EEGs of a control group. Both groups include 75 patients from HUS and Kuopio University Hospital. 

The researchers will examine a large amount of data, searching for an 鈥楨EG fingerprint鈥 that could be used as a biomarker to predict the development of respiratory difficulties. A biomarker refers to a characteristic of a disease, which may indicate the illness, help in making a more precise diagnosis, or help in following the course of a disease.

鈥楩ew other hospitals have the resources needed for this kind of scientific research or the computational knowledge required for machine learning. The development of this research knowledge benefits all types of intensive care鈥 Hanna Renvall says.

The SARS-CoV2 virus is known to attach to 鈥淎CE2 receptors鈥 which have also been found in nerve cells. In theory, the virus could thus alter the function of the respiratory centre in the central nervous system in such a way that the change could leave an identifiable fingerprint in the EEG.

This study is connected with Hanna Renvall's more extensive research project, funded by the Academy of Finland, with the goal of expanding diagnostics and predictions in neurological diseases by developing computational modelling that can be utilised in functional brain imaging.

Further information:

Hanna Renvall
Master of Science in Technology, Doctor of Medicine
Director of the BioMag Laboratory, HUS Diagnostic Centre
Department of Neuroscience and Biomedical Engineering, Aalto University
hanna.renvall@hus.fi, hanna.renvall@aalto.fi
tel. +358 40 703 6161

Riitta Salmelin
Professor
Department of Neuroscience and Biomedical Engineering, Aalto University
riitta.salmelin@aalto.fi
tel. +358 50 344 2745

 published on the HUS website 23 September [Finnish Language Only].

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