patients reach treatment, experienced centers
worldwide generally report an overall mortal-
ity among patients with altered consciousness
of less than 1% (Table 9–7). The death rate
climbs to approximately 5% in those with grade
3 to 4 coma. The mortality can be substantially
higher when institutions treat only small num-
bers of patients or lack experience or proper
facilities. Adverse prognostic factors in depres-
sant drug coma include an advanced age, the
presence of complicating medical illnesses (es-
pecially systemic infections, hepatic insuffi-
ciency, and heart failure), and lengthy coma.
Alkaline diuresis (for phenobarbital), hemodi-
alysis, and charcoal hemoperfusion all have
been reported to shorten coma and improve
prognosis for patients with severe poisoning,
especially from phenobarbital. Barring unex-
pected complications, patients recovering from
depressant drug poisoning suffer no residual
brain damage even after prolonged coma last-
ing 5 days or more. Rare exceptions to this rule
occur in overdose patients who suffer aspira-
tion pneumonia or cardiac arrest (e.g., during
tracheal or gastric intubation). A small number
of patients develop cutaneous pressure sores
or pressure neuropathies from prolonged pe-
riods of immobility during the period of im-
mobile coma before the victim is found and
brought to hospital; this may be particularly
common with barbiturate overdoses.
VEGETATIVE STATE
The vegetative state (also called coma vigil or
apallic state) denotes the recovery of a crude
cycling of arousal states heralded by the ap-
pearance of ‘‘eyes-open’’ periods in an unre-
sponsive patient.
63
Very few patients remain in
eyes-closed coma for more than 10 to 14 days;
vegetative behavior usually replaces coma by
that time. Patients in VS, like comatose patients,
show no evidence of awareness of self or their
environment, but do retain brainstem regula-
tion of cardiopulmonary function and visceral
autonomic regulation. The term persistent
vegetative state is now commonly reserved for
patients remaining in that state for at least 30
days (see ANA Committee on Ethical Affairs
1993). As indicated in the paragraphs below,
there are no clear criteria for determining when
PVS becomes permanent.
One reason for the inability to predict per-
manence early in the course of PVS is that
patients usually have badly damaged cerebral
hemispheres combined with a relatively in-
tact brainstem. Such a combination during the
early days of illness causes coma with relatively
good brainstem function, a picture similar to
patients with reversible cerebral injury.
Since the publication of the third edition
of Stupor and Coma, guidelines to aid con-
struction of prognosis in VS have advanced
greatly.
64–66
The Multisociety Task Force on
PVS,
64,65
a joint commission composed of neu-
rologists, neurosurgeons, and other specialists,
organized a comprehensive review of outcomes
of patients with prolonged VS using GOS cri-
teria. Outcomes of 434 adult and 106 pediatric
patients with TBI and 169 adult and 45 pedi-
atric patients with nontraumatic etiologies
were assessed. Figure 9–4 displays data from
the TBI group for adults. For patients in VS
for at least 1 month, 52% had recovered con-
sciousness at 1 year postinjury (some 33% of the
patients had recovered earlier than 3 months
from the time of injury). If adult TBI patients
remained in VS at 3 months, the percentage
recovering consciousness at 1 year dropped
to 35%, and to 16% for VS lasting at least 6
months. For pediatric patients with a TBI-
induced VS for 1 month, 62% recovered con-
sciousness at 1 year; if VS persisted for 3
months, this percentage dropped only to 56%,
and to 32% for patients in VS for at least 6
Consciousness, Mechanisms Underlying Outcomes, and Ethical Considerations
357
Conscious
Traumatic Injury (N = 434)
Traumatic Injury (N = 106)
% of Patients
Dead
1
100
80
60
40
20
0
3
6
12
Children
Adults
PVS
Conscious
% of Patients
Dead
1
100
80
60
40
20
0
3
6
Months after Injury
12
PVS
Nontraumatic Injury (N = 45)
Conscious
Dead
1
100
80
60
40
20
0
3
6
Months after Injury
12
PVS
Nontraumatic Injury (N = 169)
Conscious
Dead
1
100
80
60
40
20
0
3
6
12
PVS
Figure 9–4. Outcome for patients in a persistent vegetative state after a traumatic or nontraumatic injury. See also Table
9–11. (From the Multisociety Task Force,
64
with permission.)
Table 9–11. Prognosis of Vegetative State (VS) in Traumatic and Anoxic Brain Injury
N
Dead (%)
CI (99%)
VS (%)
CI (99%)
Conscious (%)
CI (99%)
Independent (%)
CI (99%)
Age
TBI* ABI*
TBI
ABI
TBI
ABI
TBI
ABI
TBI
ABI
VS at 1 Month
Adults
434
169
33
53
15
32
52
15
24
4
Children
106
45
9
22
29
65
62
13
27
6
VS at 3 Months
Adults
218
77
35
(27–43)
46
(31–61)
30
(22–38)
47
(32–62)
35
(27–44)
8
(2–19)
16
(10–22)
1
(0–4)
Children
50
31
14
(1–27)
3
(0–11)
30
(13–47)
94
(82–100)
56
(37–74)
3
(0–11)
32
(15–49)
0
VS at 6 Months
Adults
123
50
32
(40–64)
28
(12–44)
52
(40–64)
72
(56–88)
16
(9–27)
0
4
(0–9)
0
Children
28
30
14
(30–78)
0
54
(30–78)
97
(89–100)
32
(12–58)
3
(0–11)
11
(0–26)
0
*TBI, traumatic brain injury; ABI, anoxic brain injury.
Adapted from Jennet
66
and the Multisociety Task Force.
65
months. The outcome of ‘‘conscious’’ per se
does not reflect level of disability. However,
the Task Force review indicated that for adults,
within the 52% of patients recovering con-
sciousness after 1 month in VS, only 24% be-
came independent by GOS criteria. This figure
dropped to 16% for VS lasting 3 months and to
only 4% if taken out to at least 6 months.
Not surprisingly, nontraumatic VS carries a
far less optimistic prognosis. Figure 9–4 shows
comparison percentages for adult and pediatric
patients with nontraumatic VS. For adult VS
patients remaining in VS at 1 month, only 15%
regained consciousness (with only 4% inde-
pendent by GOS). These percentages worsened
to 8% and 0% for patients remaining in a non-
traumatic VS for 3 and 6 months, respectively.
Based on these data, the Task Force paper
suggested that VS after 12 months following
TBI, or 3 months following an anoxic injury,
should be considered essentially permanent.
However, it is important to recognize that a small
number of patients may recover from VS be-
yond these time points.
67–69
Such late recovery
past the cutoffs for permanent VS from both
anoxic and traumatic etiologies has generally
been to levels of severe disability, including the
minimally conscious state.
66
Nevertheless, appli-
cation of these statistics to individual cases can
be risky, unless independent evidence of the
mechanism of brain injury is available, as rare
cases of late recovery continue to be reported.
The uncertainty in prognosis in such cases
highlights the need for better methods, such as
direct measurements of cerebral function, to
help identify cases where recovery is likely.
Mortality is very high within the first year;
approximately one-third of patients die.
64,65
If
patients remain alive after a year, mortality per
year is low and some patients may continue to
live for many years.
66
Plum and Schiff studied
one patient who had remained in PVS for 25
years (see Figure 9–8). Most patients in VS die
from infection of the pulmonary system or
urinary tract.
Clinical, Imaging, and
Electrodiagnostic Correlates of
Prognosis in the Vegetative State
A few clinical signs or confirmatory tests, in-
cluding those negative predictors for coma in
general (as reviewed previously), help predict
the prognosis of VS. As noted, abnormal SSEPs
reliably indicate cortical damage and a high
probability of remaining in VS following anoxic
and traumatic brain injuries. However, normal
evoked responses do not predict recovery. In a
study of 124 patients in VS or MCS following
TBI, three variables predicted recovery of abil-
ity to follow commands: (1) initial score on the
Disability Rating Scale (DRS), (2) rate of change
on the DRS measure in the first 2 weeks of
observation, and (3) the time of admission to a
rehabilitation program following injury.
70
Several structural and functional correlates
of VS have been examined. A prospective study
of MRI imaging correlates of 80 patients re-
maining in VS following TBI at 6 to 8 weeks
(with MRI and clinical follow-up at 2, 3, 6, 9,
and 12 months) found that 42 patients who
remained in VS at 1 year showed that structural
injuries within the corpus callosum and dorso-
lateral brainstem significantly predicted nonre-
covery (214-fold and sevenfold higher probabi-
lity of nonrecovery from VS, respectively, based
on adjusted odds ratios accounting for age,
GCS, pupillary dysfunction, and number of
brain lesions).
71
Overall, this model achieved a
classification rate of 87.5% for identifying pa-
tients who would not recover past VS.
Quantitative
fluorodeoxyglucose-positron
emission tomography (FDG-PET) studies mea-
suring resting cerebral metabolism have con-
sistently demonstrated that global cerebral me-
tabolism is markedly reduced to 40% to 50% of
normal metabolic rates in most VS patients (see
page 365). Unfortunately, early identification
of low metabolic activity is not a clear predictor
of outcome and some patients have recovered
consciousness despite significant remaining ab-
normalities in resting metabolic level.
72
The N-
acetylaspartate (NAA)-to-creatine (Cr) ratio on
magnetic resonance spectroscopy (MRS) of the
thalamus is low in all patients in VS, but lower
in those who do not recover
73
; however, only a
few patients have been studied.
Efforts to predict outcome or characterize
VS using EEG have been disappointing. EEG
studies may remain abnormal as patients im-
prove or, conversely, improve when patients
do not.
74
Event-related potentials (ERPs) may
hold more promise. These potentials require
cortical processing of stimuli that can be pas-
sively presented to subjects in VS. The re-
sponses are long latency with peak activation
Consciousness, Mechanisms Underlying Outcomes, and Ethical Considerations
359
usually several hundred milliseconds after stim-
ulation and are not strictly time locked to the
stimulus onset. Long-latency auditory cortical
potentials (N100, P150), the P300 response,
and the mismatch negativity (MMN) ERPs have
each shown some potential for providing evi-
dence of recovery. The P300 response can be
elicited by inclusion of an ‘‘oddball’’ tone in
an otherwise monotonous presentation of re-
peated identical tones. The MMN is an early
component of the auditory response to the
oddball stimulus that is attention independent
and reliably induced following the N100 au-
ditory cortex potential, an early primary audi-
tory evoked response. In a study of 346 patients
in coma for 12 months with outcomes divided
into VS versus all categories better than VS
(including MCS), N100 and MMN were strong
predictors of recovery past VS; no patient with
MMN in this cohort remained in VS. If the
electrophysiologic variables were combined
with information about the pupillary light re-
flex, the probability of recovery past VS
reached 89.9%.
40
However, other studies have
raised questions about the specificity of pre-
served ERP responses
75
in VS.
MINIMALLY CONSCIOUS STATE
The minimally conscious state
76
identifies a
condition of severely impaired consciousness
with minimal but definite behavioral evidence
of self or environmental awareness. Table 9–12
provides the criteria for the diagnosis of MCS.
Like VS, MCS often exists as a transitional state
arising during recovery from coma or during
the worsening of progressive neurologic dis-
ease. In some patients, however, it may be a
permanent condition. A few studies have ex-
amined differences in outcome between VS
and MCS. Giacino and Kalmar reported ret-
rospective findings in 55 VS patients and 49
MCS patients evaluated at 1, 3, 6, and 12
months following either traumatic or nontrau-
matic injuries.
77
Both presented with similar
levels of disability at 1 month postinjury. The
MCS patients, however, had significantly bet-
ter outcomes as measured by the Disability
Rating Scale compared with outcomes for VS
patients at 1 year, particularly in the TBI pa-
tients. Strauss and colleagues
78
retrospectively
studied life expectancy of a large number of
children (ages 3 to 15) in VS (N ¼ 564) and
MCS, dividing the latter into two groups:
immobile MCS (N ¼ 705) and mobile MCS
(3,806). A significant increase in the percent-
age of patients still alive at 8 years was noted
for the mobile MCS group (81%) compared to
theimmobileMCS(65%)ortheVS(63%)group;
the latter two were statistically indistinguish-
able. Lammi and associates
79
examined 18 MCS
patients 2 to 5 years after injury and found
a marked heterogeneity of outcome despite
prolonged duration of MCS after TBI. Most of
their patients regained functional indepen-
dence, but there was a poor correlation be-
tween duration of MCS and outcome. In gen-
eral, clinical and electrodiagnostic tests have
not yet been developed for use in the diagnosis
and prognosis of MCS outside of a research
context (see below for discussion).
MCS also includes some forms of the clini-
cal syndrome of akinetic mutism (Box 9–1) and
other less well-characterized disorders of con-
sciousness. At least two different identifiable
groups of patients are considered exemplars of
akinetic mutism. Although occasionally con-
fused with VS, classical akinetic mutism re-
sembles a state of constant hypervigilance. The
patients appear attentive and vigilant but
Table 9–12 Aspen Working Group
Criteria for the Clinical Diagnosis
of the Minimally Conscious State
Evidence of limited but clearly discernible self
or environmental awareness on a reproducible
or sustained basis, as demonstrated by one or
more of the following behaviors:
1. Simple command following
2. Gestural or verbal ‘‘yes/no’’ responses
(independent of accuracy)
3. Intelligible verbalization
4. Purposeful behavior including movements or
affective behaviors in contingent relation to
relevant stimuli. Examples include:
a. Appropriate smiling or crying to relevant
visual or linguistic stimuli
b. Response to linguistic content of questions
by vocalization or gesture
c. Reaching for objects in appropriate direction
and location
d. Touching or holding objects by
accommodating to size and shape
e. Sustained visual fixation or tracking as
response to moving stimuli
From Giacino et al.,
76
with permission.
360
Plum and Posner’s Diagnosis of Stupor and Coma
Box 9–1 Akinetic Mutism Versus ‘‘Slow Syndrome’’
The term akinetic mutism originated with Cairns and colleagues.
80
They described
a young woman who, although appearing wakeful, became mute and rigidly mo-
tionless when a craniopharyngiomatous cyst expanded to compress the walls of her
third ventricle and the posterior medial-ventral surface of the frontal lobe. The
patient appeared to be unconscious; there was no spasticity. After the cyst was
drained, she recovered full awareness but possessed no memory of the ‘‘uncon-
scious’’ period. Eye movements were not described in this woman but most doc-
umented cases of this type reveal seemingly attentive, conjugate eye movements.
Oculocephalic stimulation may elicit some lateral gaze.
Subsequent observations have shown that similar findings can be produced
by lesions of the medial-basal prefrontal area, the anterior cingulate cortex, the
medial prefrontal regions supplied by the anterior cerebral arteries, and the ros-
tral basal ganglia. A similar syndrome can rarely be a feature of untreated, rigid
Parkinson’s disease or prion disease.
81
The hyperattentive form of akinetic mutism is typically seen in patients with
bilateral lesions of the anterior cingulate and medial prefrontal cortices, as oc-
curs after rupture of an anterior communicating artery aneurysm.
82
The associated
injury may sometimes be accompanied by injury to the hypothalamus and anterior
pallidum. Castaigne and associates
83
and Segarra
84
introduced ‘‘akinetic mutism’’
to describe the behavior of patients suffering structural injuries affecting the
medial-dorsal thalamus extending into the mesencephalic tegmentum. The pa-
tients suffered severe memory loss and demonstrated apathetic behavior. Al-
though such patients exhibit severe global disturbances of consciousness, they
are not categorized as minimally conscious because they are capable of commu-
nication. To mitigate confusion, we use the term slow syndrome
85
to describe pa-
tients who appear apathetic and hypersomnolent but are able to move and may
speak with understandable words.
86
Unlike akinetic mute patients, they are not
semi-rigid and lack the appearance of vigilance. Subcortical lesions that may
produce the slow syndrome include bilateral lesions of the paramedian anterior or
posterior thalamus and basal forebrain; the mesencephalic reticular formation
including periaqueductal gray matter, caudate nuclei (or either caudate in isola-
tion), and globus pallidus interna; or selective interruption of the medial forebrain
bundle.
A common denominator of akinetic mute states may be damage to the cortico-
striato-pallidal-thalamocortical loops that are critical for the function of the frontal
lobes.
87
The prefrontal cortex is served by a loop including the ventral striatum,
ventral pallidum, and mediodorsal nucleus of the thalamus; akinetic mutism can
result from bilateral damage at any level of this system.
87
Similarly, bilateral injury
to the nigrostriatal bundle in the lateral hypothalamus may produce a state of
akinetic mutism that is reversible with dopaminergic agonists.
88
At least partial
cognitive function can be recovered following restricted bilateral injuries to the
paramedian thalamus and mesencephalon.
83,84,89,90
361
remain motionless with robust preservation of
visual tracking in the form of smooth pursuit
movements (or optokinetic responses). Lim-
ited preservation of brief visual fixation can be
accepted in VS, but robust and consistent vi-
sual tracking as seen in akinetic mutism is ab-
sent in VS.
66
Patient 9–2
A 47-year-old right-handed man was brought to
the ICU with progressive somnolence and unre-
sponsiveness. Neurologic examination revealed
bilateral third nerve palsy, fluctuating bradycardia
with hypertension, and extensor posturing to pain.
The initial CT scan (Figure 9–5A) revealed a large
mass lesion centered on the mesencephalon with
surrounding edema. Intracranial lymphoma was
suspected and confirmed by biopsy. The patient
received cranial irradiation, IV steroids, and che-
motherapy. A posttreatment MRI (Figure 9–5B)
demonstrated resolution of mass effect with high
signal abnormalities within the upper mesenceph-
alon and hypothalamus. The patient appeared
alert but did not initiate communication. He occa-
sionally displayed sudden periods of agitated be-
havior. Responses to simple questions were mark-
edly delayed, but correct using yes and no answers. Dostları ilə paylaş: |