Neural oscillations track recovery of consciousness in acute traumatic brain injury patients.
Joel FrohlichJulia S CroneMicah A JohnsonEvan S LutkenhoffNorman M SpivakJohn Dell'ItaliaJoerg F HippVikesh ShresthaJesús E Ruiz TejedaCourtney RealPaul M VespaMartin M MontiPublished in: Human brain mapping (2022)
Electroencephalography (EEG), easily deployed at the bedside, is an attractive modality for deriving quantitative biomarkers of prognosis and differential diagnosis in severe brain injury and disorders of consciousness (DOC). Prior work by Schiff has identified four dynamic regimes of progressive recovery of consciousness defined by the presence or absence of thalamically-driven EEG oscillations. These four predefined categories (ABCD model) relate, on a theoretical level, to thalamocortical integrity and, on an empirical level, to behavioral outcome in patients with cardiac arrest coma etiologies. However, whether this theory-based stratification of patients might be useful as a diagnostic biomarker in DOC and measurably linked to thalamocortical dysfunction remains unknown. In this work, we relate the reemergence of thalamically-driven EEG oscillations to behavioral recovery from traumatic brain injury (TBI) in a cohort of N = 38 acute patients with moderate-to-severe TBI and an average of 1 week of EEG recorded per patient. We analyzed an average of 3.4 hr of EEG per patient, sampled to coincide with 30-min periods of maximal behavioral arousal. Our work tests and supports the ABCD model, showing that it outperforms a data-driven clustering approach and may perform equally well compared to a more parsimonious categorization. Additionally, in a subset of patients (N = 11), we correlated EEG findings with functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) connectivity between nodes in the mesocircuit-which has been theoretically implicated by Schiff in DOC-and report a trend-level relationship that warrants further investigation in larger studies.
Keyphrases
- early stage
- traumatic brain injury
- sentinel lymph node
- resting state
- functional connectivity
- working memory
- end stage renal disease
- brain injury
- magnetic resonance imaging
- cardiac arrest
- ejection fraction
- chronic kidney disease
- newly diagnosed
- prognostic factors
- intensive care unit
- clinical trial
- randomized controlled trial
- blood pressure
- patient reported outcomes
- high resolution
- subarachnoid hemorrhage
- mass spectrometry
- white matter
- case report
- cardiopulmonary resuscitation
- lymph node
- rectal cancer
- severe traumatic brain injury
- heart rate
- acute respiratory distress syndrome
- locally advanced