| Literature DB >> 29910708 |
Jitka Annen1, Séverine Blandiaux1, Nicolas Lejeune1,2,3, Mohamed A Bahri4, Aurore Thibaut1, Woosang Cho5, Christoph Guger5,6, Camille Chatelle1,7, Steven Laureys1.
Abstract
Detection and interpretation of signs of "covert command following" in patients with disorders of consciousness (DOC) remains a challenge for clinicians. In this study, we used a tactile P3-based BCI in 12 patients without behavioral command following, attempting to establish "covert command following." These results were then confronted to cerebral metabolism preservation as measured with glucose PET (FDG-PET). One patient showed "covert command following" (i.e., above-threshold BCI performance) during the active tactile paradigm. This patient also showed a higher cerebral glucose metabolism within the language network (presumably required for command following) when compared with the other patients without "covert command-following" but having a cerebral glucose metabolism indicative of minimally conscious state. Our results suggest that the P3-based BCI might probe "covert command following" in patients without behavioral response to command and therefore could be a valuable addition in the clinical assessment of patients with DOC.Entities:
Keywords: FDG-PET; P3; brain computer interface; consciousness; covert command following; disorders of consciousness
Year: 2018 PMID: 29910708 PMCID: PMC5992287 DOI: 10.3389/fnins.2018.00370
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Neurosci ISSN: 1662-453X Impact factor: 4.677
Figure 1Preserved glucose metabolism (in red-yellow) as measured with FDG-PET for the MCS– patient with signs of “covert command following” compared to patients with a FDG-PET indicative of MCS without signs of “covert command following” (top left). Mean glucose uptake of the more significant cluster (in MBq/cc) for every patient (bottom left, patients with a MCS FDG-PET in absence of “covert command following” represented with circles, the MCS– patient who did show signs of “covert command following” represented with a cross). Average standardized uptake value for the patients without “covert command following” (right top), and the standardized uptake value for the patient with “covert command following” (bottom right).
Figure 2BCI performance and areas of preserved (in red-yellow) cerebral glucose metabolism compared to healthy subjects (significant at <0.001 uncorrected). Results are presented for a representative UWS (left) and MCS (middle) patient without covert response to command, and for the patient with covert response to command (right). In the ERP plot blue lines represent the P3 for the attended hand, and red line represent the P3 for the unattended hand.
Demographic, BCI and FDG-PET information per patient.
| MCS– 1 | 40–45 | 60 m | TBI | Right | 4/6 | 100 (3) | 70 (1) | MCS |
| MCS– 2 | 20–25 | 40 m | TBI | Left | 6/6 | 20 (1) | – | MCS |
| MCS– 3 | 55–60 | 8 m | Anoxia | Right | 1/6 | 25 (42) | – | MCS |
| MCS– 4 | 55–60 | 70 m | TBI | ? | 4/6 | 10 (257) | – | MCS |
| UWS 1 | 65–70 | 3 m | Hemorrhage | Right | 4/4 | 0 (3) | – | MCS |
| UWS 2 | 30–35 | 9 m | TBI | Left | 5/5 | 20 (3) | – | MCS |
| UWS 3 | 55–60 | 6 m | Anoxia | ? | 5/5 | 75 | – | UWS |
| UWS 4 | 20–25 | 15 m | Anoxia | ? | 6/6 | 10 (51) | – | UWS |
| UWS 5 | 45–50 | 6 m | Anoxia | Right | 6/6 | 0 (23) | – | UWS |
| UWS 6 | 65–70 | 5 m | Anoxia | Left | 7/7 | 0 (21) | – | UWS |
| UWS 7 | 40–45 | 26 m | Anoxia | Right | 6/6 | 40 (480 | – | UWS |
| UWS 8 | 30–35 | 13 m | TBI | Right | 6/6 | 10 (0) | – | UWS |
The clinical diagnosis of the patients is based on the best CRS-R of at least five assessments that were performed within the week of the BCI assessment. Fluctuations in the clinical diagnosis are presented as the proportion of best diagnosis out of the total number of assessments. Median BCI performance for the two (VT2 and VT3) paradigms and between brackets the number of rejected trials are presented together with the FDG-PET based diagnosis. Patient MCS- 1 showed signs of response to command when assessed with the BCI.
Very high amplitude response.
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