+Originally published by 2 Minute Medicine® (view original article). Reused on AccessMedicine with permission.
+1. In a large cohort of individuals with disorders of consciousness exhibiting no observable response to verbal commands, approximately 25% performed a cognitive task observed on functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) or electroencephalography (EEG).
+2. Approximately one in three of those exhibiting an observable response to commands demonstrated a corresponding cognitive response.
+Evidence Rating Level: 1 (Excellent)
+Individuals with severe neurologic conditions lack behavioral responses to commands. Yet, they demonstrate brain activation on fMRI or EEG during cognitive tasks. This phenomenon is called cognitive motor dissociation (CMD). Not only is CMD associated with better recovery outcomes, but failing to detect its presence could adversely affect goals of care decisions and caregivers’ emotional well-being. There is considerable variability in clinical guidelines in investigating CMD. This prospective cohort study included 353 adults with disorders of consciousness, varying in their ability to exhibit observable responses to commands as classified by the Coma Recovery Scale-Revised (CRS-R). Brain trauma was a contributing case in 50% of these participants. Approximately 25% of those without an observable response to commands showed evidence of CMD on fMRI or EEG, whereas cognitive response was detected in 38% of those demonstrating an observable response to commands. CMD was associated with younger age, brain trauma, and a longer time since injury. The survival bias potentially limited the study as participants had survived the acute initial injury and the heterogeneity in fMRI and EEG analyses between sites. Nevertheless, these results suggested that CMD may be more prevalent than previously thought and should prompt further validation and integration of task-based fMRI and EEG investigations in patients suffering from disorders of consciousness.
In-Depth [prospective cohort study]:
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+This prospective cohort study investigated the presence of CMD among adults with disorders of consciousness. Participants were recruited from intensive care units, hospital wards, rehabilitation centers, nursing homes, and the community. Exclusion criteria included previous neurologic or psychiatric diagnoses and contraindications to MRI or EEG. fMRI and EEG studies were conducted to assess cognitive responses to task-based commands. Of the 353 participants included in the study, 241 were classified as having no observable response to commands with a diagnosis of coma or vegetative state or minimally conscious state-minus on the CRS-R. The median age of included participants was 37.9 years, and the median interval between brain injury and CRS-R assessment was 7.9 months. Brain trauma was a contributing cause in 50% of participants, with cardiac arrest or hypoxic injury and cerebrovascular events being other major causes. CMD was detected in 60 of the 241 participants (25%), 11 (18%) of whom had been assessed with only fMRI, 13 (22%) with only EEG, and 36 (60%) with both techniques. CMD was associated with lower median age (30.5 years vs. 45.3 years), brain trauma as an etiologic factor (65% vs. 38%), and a diagnosis of minimally conscious state-minus (53% vs. 38%). Conversely, among the 112 participants who demonstrated observable responses to commands, 43 (38%) showed a response to commands on fMRI, EEG, or both. These results suggested that CMD could be more prevalent than previously thought and served to prompt more rigorous large-scale validation studies to standardize and integrate fMRI and EEG techniques in assessing patients with disorders of consciousness.
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