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Return of intracranial beta oscillations and traveling waves with recovery from traumatic brain injury.

Alex P VazConnor WathenStephen MirandaRachel ThomasTimothy DarlingtonRashad JabarkheelSamuel TomlinsonJohn ArenaKamila BondSanjana SalwiSonia AjmeraLudovica Bachschmid-RomanoJames GuggerDanielle SandsmarkRamon Diaz-ArrastiaJames SchusterAshwin G RamayyaIahn CajigasBijan PesaranH Isaac ChenDmitriy Petrov
Published in: bioRxiv : the preprint server for biology (2024)
Traumatic brain injury (TBI) remains a pervasive clinical problem associated with significant morbidity and mortality. However, TBI remains clinically and biophysically ill-defined, and prognosis remains difficult even with the standardization of clinical guidelines and advent of multimodality monitoring. Here we leverage a unique data set from TBI patients implanted with either intracranial strip electrodes during craniotomy or quad-lumen intracranial bolts with depth electrodes as part of routine clinical practice. By extracting spectral profiles of this data, we found that the presence of narrow-band oscillatory activity in the beta band (12-30 Hz) closely corresponds with the neurological exam as quantified with the standard Glasgow Coma Scale (GCS). Further, beta oscillations were distributed over the cortical surface as traveling waves, and the evolution of these waves corresponded to recovery from coma, consistent with the putative role of waves in perception and cognitive activity. We consequently propose that beta oscillations and traveling waves are potential biomarkers of recovery from TBI. In a broader sense, our findings suggest that emergence from coma results from recovery of thalamo-cortical interactions that coordinate cortical beta rhythms.
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