| Literature DB >> 30850022 |
Benjamin Rohaut1, Andrey Eliseyev1, Jan Claassen2.
Abstract
This article is one of ten reviews selected from the Annual Update in Intensive Care and Emergency Medicine 2019. Other selected articles can be found online at https://www.biomedcentral.com/collections/annualupdate2019 . Further information about the Annual Update in Intensive Care and Emergency Medicine is available from http://www.springer.com/series/8901 .Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30850022 PMCID: PMC6408788 DOI: 10.1186/s13054-019-2370-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Crit Care ISSN: 1364-8535 Impact factor: 9.097
Definitions of common states of consciousness
| Definition | Other terminologies similar or very close | |
|---|---|---|
| Behaviorally defined states | ||
| Coma [ | State of unresponsiveness in which the patient lies with eyes closed and cannot be aroused to respond appropriately to stimuli even with vigorous stimulation (no eye opening or adapted motor response even to painful stimuli). | Coma-1a or 1ba (based on EEG compatibility [1a; e.g., slow unreactive predominant delta] or not [1b; e.g., reactive predominant alpha]). Some authors use a Glasgow coma scale cut-off (e.g., < 8) but this is very misleading since this can include UWS or even MCS patients in whom the ascending reticular activating system (ARAS) is likely to be functional |
| Unresponsive wakefulness syndrome (UWS) [ | State of unresponsiveness in which the patient shows spontaneous eye opening without any behavioral evidence of self or environmental awareness | Vegetative state (VS), coma vigil, apallic state, UWS/VS-2a or2ba (CMS excluded [2a] or not [2b] by functional MRI or EEG) |
| Minimally conscious state (MCS) [ | State of severely impaired consciousness with minimal but definite behavioral evidence of self or environmental awareness Distinction between MCS “minus” and “plus” has been proposed [ | Cortically Mediated Statea (CMS, in that case CMS-3b as based on behavior alone). |
| Locked-in syndrome (LIS) [4] | State in which the patient is actually conscious but de-efferented, resulting in paralysis of all four limbs and the lower cranial nerves | De-efferented state, Conscious state-4ba |
| Conscious stateb [ | State of full awareness of the self and one’s relationship to the environment, evidenced by verbal or non-verbal (e.g., purposeful motor behavior) behavior | Exit-MCS (or EMCS) when the patient emerged from MCS, Conscious state-4ba |
| Brain functional imaging defined states (e.g., fMRI, fEEG, fNIRS, fPET, fMEG) | ||
| Higher-order cortex motor dissociation (HMD) [ | Comatose, UWS or MCS-minus (clinically defined) patients that show association cortex responses to language stimuli | CMS-3aa |
| Cognitive motor dissociation (CMD) [ | Comatosec, UWS or MCS-minus clinically defined patients that show MRI or electrophysiologic evidence of command following | Functional locked-in syndrome, Conscious state-4aa |
| Communicating-CMD (Com-CMD) | CMD defined patients able to communicate using a brain computer interface (BCI) | Conscious state-4aa |
fMRI functional magnetic resonance imaging, fEEG functional electroencephalography, fNIRS function near-infrared spectroscopy, fPET functional positron emission tomography, fMEG functional magnetoencephalography
aTerminology recently proposed by Naccache [50] ranging from 1 to 4 and, taking into account both behavioral (“b”) and brain functional imaging (“a”) evidence. Note that as a consequence, the Cortically Mediated State (CMS) and the Conscious state appear both in the behaviorally and the brain functional imaging sections of this table
bNote that as there is no consensus definition of consciousness yet, provided here is a pragmatic operational definition that would match the currently most commonly used definitions. It corresponds to the access consciousness, using the subjective report criterion
cThe original description actually did not include the comatose state but was included here since the absence of eye opening cannot rule out the possibility of CMD
Approaches to assess consciousness
FDG-PET fluorodeoxyglucose position emission tomography, PCI perturbational complexity index, TMS transcranial magnetic stimulation, EEG electroencephalography, (f) MRI (functional) magnetic resonance imaging, ICU intensive care unit
Fig. 1Brain-computer interface systems. Brain-computer interface systems use state-of-the-art machine learning methods to decode brain activity. A brain-computer interface system is realized using several components: (1) brain signal activity acquisition: electroencephalogram (EEG), electrocorticography (ECoG), functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI), functional near-infrared spectroscopy (fNIRS), etc.; (2) signal processing: band-pass filtering, outlier removal, artifact correction, normalization, etc.; (3) feature extraction: gain task-relevant information from acquired data; (4) classification/regression: decode the intended action of the subject by applying machine learning methods; (5) control commands to external devices: screen, wheelchair, exoskeleton, etc.; (6) feedback: the subject receives feedback about how well he/she performed in a certain training task