Metabolic activity in external and internal awareness networks in severely brain-damaged patients

Authors

  • Aurore Thibaut
  • Marie-Aurélie Bruno
  • Camille Chatelle
  • Olivia Gosseries
  • Audrey Vanhaudenhuyse
  • Athena Demertzi
  • Caroline Schnakers
  • Marie Thonnard
  • Vanessa Charland-Verville
  • Claire Bernard
  • Mohammed Ali Bahri
  • Christophe Phillips
  • Mélanie Boly
  • Roland Hustinx
  • Steven Laureys

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.2340/16501977-0940

Keywords:

vegetative state, minimally conscious state, positron emission tomography, consciousness, self-awareness, traumatic brain injury.

Abstract

Objective: An extrinsic cerebral network (encompassing lateral frontoparietal cortices) related to external/sensory awareness and an intrinsic midline network related to internal/self-awareness have been identified recently. This study measured brain metabolism in both networks in patients with severe brain damage. Design: Prospective [18F]-fluorodeoxyglucose-positron emission tomography and Coma Recovery Scale-Revised assessments in a university hospital setting. Subjects: Healthy volunteers and patients in vegetative state/unresponsive wakefulness syndrome (VS/UWS), minimally conscious state (MCS), emergence from MCS (EMCS), and locked-in syndrome (LIS). Results: A total of 70 patients were included in the study: 24 VS/UWS, 28 MCS, 10 EMCS, 8 LIS and 39 age-matched controls. VS/UWS showed metabolic dysfunction in extrinsic and intrinsic networks and thalami. MCS showed dysfunction mostly in intrinsic network and thalami. EMCS showed impairment in posterior cingulate/retrosplenial cortices. LIS showed dysfunction only in infratentorial regions. Coma Recovery Scale-Revised total scores correlated with metabolic activity in both extrinsic and part of the intrinsic network and thalami. Conclusion: Progressive recovery of extrinsic and intrinsic awareness network activity was observed in severely brain-damaged patients, ranging from VS/UWS, MCS, EMCS to LIS. The predominance of intrinsic network impairment in MCS could reflect altered internal/self-awareness in these patients, which is difficult to quantify at the bedside.

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Published

2012-05-30

How to Cite

Thibaut, A., Bruno, M.-A., Chatelle, C., Gosseries, O., Vanhaudenhuyse, A., Demertzi, A., … Laureys, S. (2012). Metabolic activity in external and internal awareness networks in severely brain-damaged patients. Journal of Rehabilitation Medicine, 44(6), 487–494. https://doi.org/10.2340/16501977-0940

Issue

Section

Original Report