NeuroImage: Clinical (Jan 2017)

Measures of metabolism and complexity in the brain of patients with disorders of consciousness

  • Olivier Bodart,
  • Olivia Gosseries,
  • Sarah Wannez,
  • Aurore Thibaut,
  • Jitka Annen,
  • Melanie Boly,
  • Mario Rosanova,
  • Adenauer G. Casali,
  • Silvia Casarotto,
  • Giulio Tononi,
  • Marcello Massimini,
  • Steven Laureys

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.nicl.2017.02.002
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. C
pp. 354 – 362

Abstract

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Background: Making an accurate diagnosis in patients with disorders of consciousness remains challenging. 18F-fluorodeoxyglucose (FDG)–PET has been validated as a diagnostic tool in this population, and allows identifying unresponsive patients with a capacity for consciousness. In parallel, the perturbational complexity index (PCI), a new measure based on the analysis of the electroencephalographic response to transcranial magnetic stimulation, has also been suggested as a tool to distinguish between unconscious and conscious states. The aim of the study was to cross-validate FDG–PET and PCI, and to identify signs of consciousness in otherwise unresponsive patients. Methods: We jointly applied the Coma Recovery Scale-Revised, FDG–PET and PCI to assess 24 patients with non-acute disorders of consciousness or locked-in syndrome (13 male; 19–54 years old; 12 traumatic; 9 unresponsive wakefulness syndrome, 11 minimally conscious state; 2 emergence from the minimally conscious state, and 2 locked-in syndrome). Results: FDG–PET and PCI provided congruent results in 22 patients, regardless of their behavioural diagnosis. Notably, FDG–PET and PCI revealed preserved metabolic rates and high complexity levels in four patients who were behaviourally unresponsive. Conclusion: We propose that jointly measuring the metabolic activity and the electrophysiological complexity of cortical circuits is a useful complement to the diagnosis and stratification of patients with disorders of consciousness.

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