HIDDEN BRAIN SIGNATURES IN VEGETATIVE STATE
Scientists in
Cambridge have found hidden signatures in the brains of people in a vegetative
state, which point to networks that could support consciousness even when a
patient appears to be unconscious and unresponsive. The study could help
doctors identify patients who are aware despite being unable to communicate.
There has been a great
deal of interest recently in how much patients in a vegetative state following
severe brain injury are aware of their surroundings. Although unable to move
and respond, some of these patients are able to carry out tasks such as imagining
playing a game of tennis. Using a functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI)
scanner, which measures brain activity, researchers have previously been able
to record activity in the pre-motor cortex, the part of the brain which deals
with movement, in apparently unconscious patients asked to imagine playing
tennis.
Now, a team of
researchers led by scientists at the University of Cambridge and the MRC
Cognition and Brain Sciences Unit, Cambridge, have used high-density
electroencephalographs (EEG) and a branch of mathematics known as 'graph
theory' to study networks of activity in the brains of 32 patients diagnosed as
vegetative and minimally conscious and compare them to healthy adults. The
findings of the research are published today in the journal PLOS
Computational Biology. The study was funded mainly by the Wellcome Trust,
the National Institute of Health Research Cambridge Biomedical Research Centre
and the Medical Research Council (MRC).
The researchers showed
that the rich and diversely connected networks that support awareness in the
healthy brain are typically -- but importantly, not always -- impaired in
patients in a vegetative state. Some vegetative patients had well-preserved
brain networks that look similar to those of healthy adults -- these patients
were those who had shown signs of hidden awareness by following commands such
as imagining playing tennis.
Dr Srivas Chennu from
the Department of Clinical Neurosciences at the University of Cambridge says:
"Understanding how consciousness arises from the interactions between
networks of brain regions is an elusive but fascinating scientific question.
But for patients diagnosed as vegetative and minimally conscious, and their families,
this is far more than just an academic question -- it takes on a very real
significance. Our research could improve clinical assessment and help identify
patients who might be covertly aware despite being uncommunicative."
The findings could
help researchers develop a relatively simple way of identifying which patients
might be aware whilst in a vegetative state. Unlike the 'tennis test', which
can be a difficult task for patients and requires expensive and often
unavailable fMRI scanners, this new technique uses EEG and could therefore be
administered at a patient's bedside. However, the tennis test is stronger
evidence that the patient is indeed conscious, to the extent that they can
follow commands using their thoughts. The researchers believe that a combination
of such tests could help improve accuracy in the prognosis for a patient.
Dr Tristan
Bekinschtein from the MRC Cognition and Brain Sciences Unit and the Department
of Psychology, University of Cambridge, adds: "Although there are
limitations to how predictive our test would be used in isolation, combined
with other tests it could help in the clinical assessment of patients. If a
patient's 'awareness' networks are intact, then we know that they are likely to
be aware of what is going on around them. But unfortunately, they also suggest
that vegetative patients with severely impaired networks at rest are unlikely
to show any signs of consciousness."
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