Verso la comprensione dello stato vegetativo e di minima coscienza. - PhDData

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Verso la comprensione dello stato vegetativo e di minima coscienza.

The thesis was published by Cavinato, Marianna, in January 2013, University of Padova.

Abstract:

The limited evidence and inconsistency of purposeful behaviors in patients in a minimally conscious state (MCS) asks for objective electrophysiological marker of the level of consciousness. Here, a comparison between event-related potentials (ERPs) was investigated using different level of stimulus complexity. ERPs were recorded in seventeen patients, 6 of which in vegetative state (VS), 11 in MCS, and 10 controls. Three oddball paradigms with different level of complexity were applied: sine tones, the subject’s own name versus sine tones and other first names. Latencies and amplitudes of N1 and P3 waves were compared. Cortical responses were found in all MCS patients, and in 6 of 11 patients in VS. Healthy controls and MCS patients showed a progressive increase of P3 latency in relation to the level of stimulus complexity. No modulation of P3 latency was observed in the vegetative patients. These results suggest that the modulation of P3 latency related to stimulus complexity may represent an objective index of higher-order processing integration that predicts the recovery of consciousness from VS to MCS when clinical manifestations are inconsistent.
A second step was encouraged by the work of Schiff et al. (2007) reporting a MCS patient who responded to deep brain stimulation (DBS). We explored six patients that participated in an ABA design alternating between repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation (rTMS) and peripheral nerve stimulation. After peripheral stimulation, patients did not exhibit clinical, behavioral, or electroencephalographic (EEG) changes. The frequency of specific and meaningful behaviors increased after rTMS in a patient, along with the absolute and relative power of the EEG δ, β, and α bands.
Afterwards, a more consistent sample has been enrolled to reproduce the first encouraging results. Thirty MCS/VS patients participated to a randomized controlled trial consisting of transcranial stimulations with transcranial direct current stimulation (tDCS) and rTMS. Patients in MCS showed an increase of long range fronto-parietal connectivity indicating a complex information processing and a decrease of fluctuation of arousal . VS patients did not. These results suggest that rTMS may improve long range connections between remote cortical areas and promote, at some level, recovery of awareness and arousal in MCS patients.



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