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1.
Am J Respir Crit Care Med ; 205(2): 171-182, 2022 01 15.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34748722

RESUMO

Rationale: Predicting recovery of consciousness in unresponsive, brain-injured individuals has crucial implications for clinical decision-making. Propofol induces distinctive brain network reconfiguration in the healthy brain as it loses consciousness. In patients with disorders of consciousness, the brain network's reconfiguration to propofol may reveal the patient's underlying capacity for consciousness. Objectives: To design and test a new metric for the prognostication of consciousness recovery in disorders of consciousness. Methods: Using a within-subject design, we conducted an anesthetic protocol with concomitant high-density EEG in 12 patients with a disorder of consciousness after a brain injury. We quantified the reconfiguration of EEG network hubs and directed functional connectivity before, during, and after propofol exposure and obtained an index of propofol-induced network reconfiguration: the adaptive reconfiguration index. We compared the index of patients who recovered consciousness 3 months after EEG (n = 3) to that of patients who did not recover or remained in a chronic disorder of consciousness (n = 7) and conducted a logistic regression to assess prognostic accuracy. Measurements and Main Results: The adaptive reconfiguration index was significantly higher in patients who later recovered full consciousness (U value = 21, P = 0.008) and able to discriminate with 100% accuracy whether the patient recovered consciousness. Conclusions: The adaptive reconfiguration index of patients who recovered from a disorder of consciousness at 3-month follow-up was linearly separable from that of patients who did not recover or remained in a chronic disorder of consciousness on the single-subject level. EEG and propofol can be administered at the bedside with few contraindications, affording the adaptive reconfiguration index tremendous translational potential as a prognostic measure of consciousness recovery in acute clinical settings.


Assuntos
Lesões Encefálicas/induzido quimicamente , Lesões Encefálicas/fisiopatologia , Coma/induzido quimicamente , Coma/fisiopatologia , Transtornos da Consciência/induzido quimicamente , Transtornos da Consciência/fisiopatologia , Estado de Consciência/efeitos dos fármacos , Propofol/efeitos adversos , Adolescente , Adulto , Idoso , Período de Recuperação da Anestesia , Feminino , Previsões , Humanos , Masculino , Pessoa de Meia-Idade , Valor Preditivo dos Testes , Recuperação de Função Fisiológica/efeitos dos fármacos , Adulto Jovem
2.
Neurosci Conscious ; 2020(1): niaa017, 2020.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33376599

RESUMO

Neuroimaging methods have improved the accuracy of diagnosis in patients with disorders of consciousness (DOC), but novel, clinically translatable methods for prognosticating this population are still needed. In this case series, we explored the association between topographic and global brain network properties and prognosis in patients with DOC. We recorded high-density electroencephalograms in three patients with acute or chronic DOC, two of whom also underwent an anesthetic protocol. In these two cases, we compared functional network motifs, network hubs and power topography (i.e. topographic network properties), as well as relative power and graph theoretical measures (i.e. global network properties), at baseline, during exposure to anesthesia and after recovery from anesthesia. We also compared these properties to a group of healthy, conscious controls. At baseline, the topographic distribution of nodes participating in alpha motifs resembled conscious controls in patients who later recovered consciousness and high relative power in the delta band was associated with a negative outcome. Strikingly, the reorganization of network motifs, network hubs and power topography under anesthesia followed by their return to a baseline patterns upon recovery from anesthesia, was associated with recovery of consciousness. Our findings suggest that topographic network properties measured at the single-electrode level might provide more prognostic information than global network properties that are averaged across the brain network. In addition, we propose that the brain network's capacity to reorganize in response to a perturbation is a precursor to the recovery of consciousness in DOC patients.

3.
Front Hum Neurosci ; 14: 582125, 2020.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33281582

RESUMO

Individuals who have suffered a severe brain injury typically require extensive hospitalization in intensive care units (ICUs), where critical treatment decisions are made to maximize their likelihood of recovering consciousness and cognitive function. These treatment decisions can be difficult when the neurological assessment of the patient is limited by unreliable behavioral responses. Reliable objective and quantifiable markers are lacking and there is both (1) a poor understanding of the mechanisms underlying the brain's ability to reconstitute consciousness and cognition after an injury and (2) the absence of a reliable and clinically feasible method of tracking cognitive recovery in ICU survivors. Our goal is to develop and validate a clinically relevant EEG paradigm that can inform the prognosis of unresponsive, brain-injured patients in the ICU. This protocol describes a study to develop a point-of-care system intended to accurately predict outcomes of unresponsive, brain-injured patients in the ICU. We will recruit 200 continuously-sedated brain-injured patients across five ICUs. Between 24 h and 7 days post-ICU admission, high-density EEG will be recorded from behaviorally unresponsive patients before, during and after a brief cessation of pharmacological sedation. Once patients have reached the waking stage, they will be asked to complete an abridged Cambridge Brain Sciences battery, a web-based series of neurocognitive tests. The test series will be repeated every day during acute admission (ICU, ward), or as often as possible given the constraints of ICU and ward care. Following discharge, patients will continue to complete the same test series on weekly, and then monthly basis, for up to 12 months following injury. Functional outcomes will also be assessed up to 12 months post-injury. We anticipate our findings will lead to an increased ability to identify patients, as soon as possible after their brain injury, who are most likely to survive, and to make accurate predictions about their long-term cognitive and functional outcome. In addition to providing critically needed support for clinical decision-making, this study has the potential to transform our understanding of key functional EEG networks associated with consciousness and cognition.

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