The locked-in syndrome (pseudocoma) describes patients who are awake and conscious but selectively deefferented, i.e., have no means of producing speech, limb or facial movements. Acute ventral pontine lesions are its most common cause. People with such brainstem lesions often remain comatose for some days or weeks, needing artificial respiration and then gradually wake up, but remaining paralyzed and voiceless, superficially resembling patients in a vegetative state or akinetic mutism. In acute locked-in syndrome (LIS), eye-coded communication and evaluation of cognitive and emotional functioning is very limited because vigilance is fluctuating and eye movements may be inconsistent, very small, and easily exhausted. It has been shown that more than half of the time it is the family and not the physician who first realized that the patient was aware. Distressingly, recent studies reported that the diagnosis of LIS on average takes over 2.5 months. In some cases it took 4-6 years before aware and sensitive patients, locked in an immobile body, were recognized as being conscious. Once a LIS patient becomes medically stable, and given appropriate medical care, life expectancy increases to several decades. Even if the chances of good motor recovery are very limited, existing eye-controlled, computer-based communication technology currently allow the patient to control his environment, use a word processor coupled to a speech synthesizer, and access the worldwide net. Healthy individuals and medical professionals sometimes assume that the quality of life of an LIS patient is so poor that it is not worth living. On the contrary, chronic LIS patients typically self-report meaningful quality of life and their demand for euthanasia is surprisingly infrequent. Biased clinicians might provide less aggressive medical treatment and influence the family in inappropriate ways. It is important to stress that only the medically stabilized, informed LIS patient is competent to consent to or refuse life-sustaining treatment. Patients suffering from LIS should not be denied the right to die - and to die with dignity - but also, and more importantly, they should not be denied the right to live - and to live with dignity and the best possible revalidation, and pain and symptom management. In our opinion, there is an urgent need for a renewed ethical and medicolegal framework for our care of locked-in patients.
Download full-text PDF |
Source |
---|---|
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/S0079-6123(05)50034-7 | DOI Listing |
Neurol Neurochir Pol
January 2024
Department of Gynecology, Obstetrics and Oncological Gynecology, Faculty of Medicine in Katowice, Medical University of Silesia, Katowice, Poland.
PNAS Nexus
December 2024
Institut du Cerveau-Paris Brain Institute-ICM, Inserm, Sorbonne Université, CNRS, APHP,Hôpital de la Pitié Salpêtrière, 75013 Paris, France.
Attention shapes our consciousness content and perception by increasing the probability of becoming aware and/or better encoding a selection of the incoming inner or outer sensory world. Engaging interoceptive and exteroceptive attention should elicit distinctive neural responses to visceral and external stimuli and could be useful in detecting covert command-following in unresponsive patients. We designed a task to engage healthy participants' attention toward their heartbeats or auditory stimuli and investigated whether brain dynamics and the heartbeat-evoked potential (HEP) distinguished covert interoceptive-exteroceptive attention.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCureus
November 2024
Orthopedic Surgery, Eisenhower Health, Rancho Mirage, USA.
We present a case of a thumb metacarpophalangeal (MCP) joint dislocation complicated by the interposition of the sesamoid bones. This case highlights a clinical scenario referred to as the "locked thumb" syndrome, in which a first-digit MCP dislocation is complicated by an entrapped anatomical structure that hinders closed reduction. In this case, the thumb sesamoid bones became lodged at the base of the dislocated proximal phalanx.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNeurocrit Care
December 2024
Department of Neurology, University of Pennsylvania, 3400 Spruce Street, Philadelphia, PA, 19104, USA.
Brain Topogr
November 2024
Department of Rehabilitation Medicine, Xuan Wu Hospital, Capital Medical University, Beijing, China.
Objectives: To observe the functional differences in the key brain areas in patients with different levels of consciousness after severe brain injury, and provide reference for confirming the objective diagnosis indicators for prolonged disorders of consciousness (pDoCs).
Methods: This prospective study enrolled patients with pDoCs hospitalized in the department of rehabilitation medicine of our Hospital. Levels of consciousness and clinical outcomes were assessed according to diagnostic criteria and behavioral scales.
Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!