| Literature DB >> 25520636 |
Camille Chatelle1, Aurore Thibaut2, Olivia Gosseries3, Marie-Aurélie Bruno2, Athena Demertzi2, Claire Bernard4, Roland Hustinx4, Luaba Tshibanda5, Mohamed A Bahri2, Steven Laureys2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Zolpidem, a short-acting non-benzodiazepine GABA agonist hypnotic, has been shown to induce paradoxical responses in some patients with disorders of consciousness (DOC), leading to recovery of arousal and cognitive abilities. We here assessed zolpidem-induced changes in regional brain metabolism in three patients with known zolpidem response in chronic post-anoxic minimally conscious state (MCS).Entities:
Keywords: brain metabolism; mesocircuit hypothesis; minimally conscious state; positron emission tomography; prefrontal cortex; zolpidem
Year: 2014 PMID: 25520636 PMCID: PMC4251320 DOI: 10.3389/fnhum.2014.00917
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Hum Neurosci ISSN: 1662-5161 Impact factor: 3.169
Figure 1The mesocircuit model underlying forebrain dysfunction and interventions in severe brain injuries (From Giacino et al., . Reduction of thalamocortical and thalamostriatal outflow following deafferentation and neuronal loss from the central thalamus withdraws the afferent drive to the striatum, which may then fail to reach firing threshold because of their requirement for high levels of synaptic background activity. Loss of active inhibition from the striatum allows neurons of the globus pallidus interna to tonically fire and provide active inhibition to their synaptic targets, including relay neurons of the already disfacilitated central thalamus, and possibly also the projection neurons of the pedunculopontine nucleus. Since the GABAA a-1 subunit is normally expressed in large quantities in the globus pallidus interna, zolpidem could inhibit the latter, substituting its normal inhibition from the striatum, and hence induce an increase of the thalamic excitatory influence on prefrontal cortices.
Behavioral assessments after placebo and zolpidem intake (based on the Coma Recovery Scale-Revised).
MCS−, minimally conscious state minus (i.e., non reflex movements without response to command); MCS+, minimally conscious state plus (i.e., presence of response to command); EMCS, emergence from the minimally conscious state (i.e., functional communication or object use).
*Indicates clinical signs compatible with MCS. †Indicates emergence from minimally conscious state. P, placebo; Z, zolpidem. Highest score achieved for each subscale is represented by the black boxes.
Regions showing significant impaired metabolism following placebo and zolpidem and relative increase following zolpidem intake.
| Right thalamus | 12 | −16 | 10 | 6.15 | ≤0.0001 |
| Left thalamus | −12 | −16 | 12 | 6.11 | ≤0.0001 |
| Left posterior cingulate cortex (B31) | −2 | −28 | 34 | 5.98 | ≤0.0001 |
| Left middle frontal gyrus (B6) | −34 | 18 | 60 | 4.00 | ≤0.0001 |
| Left superior frontal gyrus (B6/10) | −20 | 14 | 70 | 3.64 | ≤0.0001 |
| Left precuneus (B19) | −44 | −70 | 42 | 3.93 | ≤0.0001 |
| Right precentral gyrus (B6) | 36 | −12 | 70 | 3.86 | ≤0.0001 |
| Right middle frontal gyrus (B6) | 48 | 12 | 56 | 3.63 | ≤0.0001 |
| Right superior frontal gyrus (B8) | 32 | 30 | 56 | 3.50 | ≤0.0001 |
| Left insula (B13) | −46 | 6 | −2 | 3.51 | ≤0.0001 |
| Right inferior parietal lobe (B40) | 64 | −32 | 48 | 3.25 | ≤0.001 |
| Left precentral gyrus (B6) | −38 | −16 | 68 | 3.19 | ≤0.001 |
| Right thalamus | 12 | −16 | 10 | 6.34 | ≤0.0001 |
| Left thalamus | −10 | −16 | 10 | 6.24 | ≤0.0001 |
| Left posterior cingulate cortex (B31) | −2 | −28 | 34 | 5.95 | ≤0.0001 |
| Right precentral gyrus (B6/4) | 36 | −12 | 70 | 4.02 | ≤0.0001 |
| Left superior frontal gyrus (B6/8) | −14 | 16 | 70 | 9.77 | ≤0.0001 |
| Left middle frontal gyrus (B6) | −32 | 20 | 60 | 3.63 | ≤0.0001 |
| Left precuneus (B19) | −42 | −70 | 44 | 3.57 | ≤0.0001 |
| Left precentral gyrus (B6) | −38 | −16 | 68 | 3.51 | ≤0.0001 |
| Right inferior parietal lobe (B40) | 64 | −30 | 48 | 3.37 | ≤0.0001 |
| Left superior temporal gyrus (B22) | −46 | 4 | −4 | 3.29 | ≤0.0001 |
| Left superior frontal gyrus (B10) | −22 | 56 | 24 | 4.35 | ≤0.0001 |
| Right superior frontal gyrus (B10) | 12 | 60 | 20 | 4.35 | ≤0.0001 |
| Right medial frontal gyrus (B9) | 8 | 42 | 32 | 4.05 | ≤0.0001 |
| Left insula (B13) | −44 | 14 | 2 | 3.37 | ≤0.0001 |
| Left inferior frontal gyrus (B47) | −34 | 20 | −8 | 3.32 | ≤0.0001 |
| Left middle frontal gyrus (B8) | −54 | 14 | 42 | 3.34 | ≤0.0001 |
| Left angular gyrus (B39) | −46 | −62 | 34 | 3.22 | ≤0.001 |
| Right middle frontal gyrus (B9) | 44 | 18 | 28 | 3.24 | ≤0.001 |
| Left inferior parietal lobe (B40) | −44 | −54 | 42 | 3.22 | ≤0.001 |
coordinates of peak voxels in standardized stereotaxic MNI space.
Corrected p-value for multiple comparisons.
Uncorrected p-value.
Figure 2Impaired brain metabolism after placebo and zolpidem intake and areas showing relative recovery after zolpidem. Brain areas showing impaired metabolism (in blue) following placebo and zolpidem administration and regions which were impaired following placebo but showed relative recovery of activity after zolpidem intake (in red). For display purposes results are shown thresholded at uncorrected p < 0.001. From left to right, medial right and left view, frontal and posterior view of a 3D rendered brain MRI.
Figure 3Normalized cerebral metabolic rate for glucose (nCMRGlc) values in prefrontal cortices after placebo. Values reported for the cluster using peak coordinates x, y, z = −22, 56, 24 after placebo and zolpidem intake in patients, as compared to healthy controls (boxplot showing median, 25–75% quartiles and inner fences).