Detecting Brain Activity Following a Verbal Command in Patients With Disorders of Consciousness

oleh: Fuyan Wang, Fuyan Wang, Nantu Hu, Xiaohua Hu, Xiaohua Hu, Shan Jing, Lizette Heine, Lizette Heine, Aurore Thibaut, Wangshan Huang, Yifan Yan, Jing Wang, Caroline Schnakers, Caroline Schnakers, Steven Laureys, Haibo Di

Format: Article
Diterbitkan: Frontiers Media S.A. 2019-09-01

Deskripsi

BackgroundThe 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.MethodsWe 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).ResultsWe 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).ConclusionLongitudinal 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.