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- Title
Detecting Brain Activity Following a Verbal Command in Patients With Disorders of Consciousness.
- Authors
Wang, Fuyan; Hu, Nantu; Hu, Xiaohua; Jing, Shan; Heine, Lizette; Thibaut, Aurore; Huang, Wangshan; Yan, Yifan; Wang, Jing; Schnakers, Caroline; Laureys, Steven; Di, Haibo
- Abstract
Background: The accurate assessment of patients with disorders of consciousness (DOC) is a challenge to most experienced clinicians. As a potential clinical tool, functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) could detect residual awareness without the need for the patients' actual motor responses. Methods: We adopted a simple active fMRI motor paradigm (hand raising) to detect residual awareness in these patients. Twenty-nine patients were recruited. They met the diagnosis of minimally conscious state (MCS) (male = 6, female = 2; n = 8), vegetative state/unresponsive wakefulness syndrome (VS/UWS) (male = 17, female = 4; n = 21). Results: We analyzed the command-following responses for robust evidence of statistically reliable markers of motor execution, similar to those found in 15 healthy controls. Of the 29 patients, four (two MCS, two VS/UWS) could adjust their brain activity to the "hand-raising" command, and they showed activation in motor-related regions (which could not be discovered in the own-name task). Conclusion: Longitudinal behavioral assessments showed that, of these four patients, two in a VS/UWS recovered to MCS and one from MCS recovered to MCS+ (i.e., showed command following). In patients with no response to hand raising task, six VS/UWS and three MCS ones showed recovery in follow-up procedure. The simple active fMRI "hand-raising" task can elicit brain activation in patients with DOC, similar to those observed in healthy volunteers. Activity of the motor-related network may be taken as an indicator of high-level cognition that cannot be discerned through conventional behavioral assessment.
- Subjects
FUNCTIONAL magnetic resonance imaging; PERSISTENT vegetative state; BEHAVIORAL assessment; CONSCIOUSNESS disorders
- Publication
Frontiers in Neuroscience, 2019, p1
- ISSN
1662-4548
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.3389/fnins.2019.00976