| Literature DB >> 25984436 |
Walter F Haupt1, Hans Christian Hansen2, Rudolf W C Janzen3, Raimund Firsching4, Norbert Galldiks5.
Abstract
The clinical sign of coma is a common feature in critical care medicine. However, little information has been put forth on the correlations between coma and cerebral imaging methods. The purpose of the article is to compile the available information derived from various imaging methods and placing it in a context of clinical knowledge of coma and related states. The definition of coma and the cerebral structures responsible for consciousness are described; the mechanisms of cerebral lesions leading to impaired consciousness and coma are explained. Cerebral imaging methods provide a large array of information on the structural changes of brain tissue in the various diseases leading to coma. Circumscript lesions produce space-occupying masses that displace the brain, ultimately leading to various types of herniation. Generalized disease of the brain usually leads to diffuse brain swelling which also can cause herniation. Epileptic states, however, rarely are detectable by imaging methods and mandate EEG examinations. Another important aspect of imaging in coma is the increasing use of functional imaging methods, which can detect the function of loss of function in various areas of the brain and render information on the extent and severity of brain damage as well as on the prognosis of disease. The MRI methods of (1)H-spectroscopy and diffusion tensor imaging may provide more functional information in the future.Entities:
Keywords: Brain death; Brain disease; Coma; Computed tomography (CT); Functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging (fMRI); Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI)
Year: 2015 PMID: 25984436 PMCID: PMC4424227 DOI: 10.1186/s40064-015-0869-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Springerplus ISSN: 2193-1801
Figure 168 year- old patient with bilateral embolic thalamic infarctions causing coma.
Figure 290 year-old patient with thrombosis of inner veins, causing bilateral thalamic and basal ganglia edema, resulting in coma.
Initial clinical assessment (Pseudocoma is not included since it can mimic any type of coma)
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| Coma without focal signs or neck stiffness | anoxic-ischemic |
| toxic-.metabolic | |
| (post-) epileptic | |
| inflammatory | |
| hypothermia | |
| traumatic brain injury | |
| Coma with neck stiffness | subarachnoid hemorrhage |
| meningitis | |
| meningoencephalitis | |
| Coma with focal signs | neurovascular (arterial infarctions, hemorrhages, venous thrombosis) |
Correlation of localization and clinical signs in comatose states
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|---|---|
| Coma with bilateral hemispheric lesions | Quadriparesis with symmetrical alteration of muscle tone and reflexes (extensor and flexor posturing, Babinski’s sign) |
| Seizures, myoclonus possible | |
| Brain stem and pupillary reflexes are intact | |
| Coma with unilateral supratentorial lesion and secondary brain stem lesion | Ipsilateral oculomotor nerve palsy and contralateral hemiparesis evolving to quadriparesis |
| Coma with primary brain stem lesion | Quadriparesis with an asymmetrical muscle tone und reflex abnormalities (extensor and flexor posturing Babinski’s sign) |
| Pathological brain stem reflexes | |
| Coma due to toxic and metabolic disease | Tetraparesis with symmetrical muscle tone and reflex abnormalities (extensor and flexor posturing Babinski’s sign) |
| Pathological brain stem reflexes and pupillary reflexes intact (except in opiate or sympathicomimetic intoxications) | |
| Myoclonus or seizures possible |
Figure 345 year-old patient with coma and lymphocytic pleocytosis in CSF, caused by immune-mediated encephalitis.
Figure 426 y/o patient with traumatic brain injury. A. CT scan only shows impression fracture and mild swelling. B. MRI shows severe contusion of right temporal lobe and bilateral mesencephalic lesions causing coma.
Figure 516 y/o patient with traumatic brain injury. A. CT shows no lesion. B. MRI shows multiple disseminated microbleeds in the T2* sequences.