Patients with prolonged disorders of consciousness (PDOC) are often unable to communicate their state of consciousness. Determining the latter is essential for the patient's care and prospects of recovery. Auditory stimulation in combination with neural recordings is a promising technique towards an objective assessment of conscious awareness. Here, we investigated the potential of complex, acoustic stimuli to elicit EEG responses suitable for classifying multiple subject groups, from unconscious to responding. We presented naturalistic auditory textures with unexpectedly changing statistics to human listeners. Awake, active listeners were asked to indicate the change by button press, while all other groups (awake passive, asleep, minimally conscious state (MCS), and unresponsive wakefulness syndrome (UWS)) listened passively. We quantified the evoked potential at stimulus onset and change in stimulus statistics, as well as the complexity of neural response during the change of stimulus statistics. On the group level, onset and change potentials classified patients and healthy controls successfully but failed to differentiate between the UWS and MCS groups. Conversely, the Lempel-Ziv complexity of the scalp-level potential allowed reliable differentiation between UWS and MCS even for individual subjects, when compared with the clinical assessment aligned to the EEG measurements. The accuracy appears to improve further when taking the latest available clinical diagnosis into account. In summary, EEG signal complexity during onset and changes in complex acoustic stimuli provides an objective criterion for distinguishing states of consciousness in clinical patients. These results suggest EEG-recordings as a cost-effective tool to choose appropriate treatments for non-responsive PDOC patients.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.nicl.2020.102471 | DOI Listing |
Neurology
February 2025
Department of Neurology, Perelman School of Medicine, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia.
Determining the level of consciousness in patients with brain injury-and more fundamentally, establishing what they can experience-is ethically and clinically impactful. Patient behaviors may unreliably reflect their level of consciousness: a subset of unresponsive patients demonstrate covert consciousness by willfully modulating their brain activity to commands through fMRI or EEG. However, current paradigms for assessing covert consciousness remain fundamentally limited because they are insensitive, rely on imperfect assumptions of functional neuroanatomy, and do not reflect the spectrum of conscious experience.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNeuropsychiatr Dis Treat
January 2025
Division of Psychiatry Research, Zucker Hillside Hospital, Northwell Health, New York, NY, USA.
Peripartum depression (PPD) affects approximately one in every eight birthing individuals. Despite a high prevalence, PPD is underdiagnosed and undertreated. Several PPD treatment options exist including psychotherapies, conventional serotonergic-based antidepressants and alternative and integrative medicine approaches.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Psychoactive Drugs
January 2025
Open Psychedelic Evaluation Nexus,Portland, OR, USA.
New legal frameworks for supervised psychedelic services are emerging, with Oregon and Colorado implementing programs to train and license psilocybin facilitators. This study describes Oregon's early psilocybin facilitator workforce and assesses state-approved training programs. The Open Psychedelic Evaluation Nexus (OPEN) reviewed Oregon Health Authority-approved training programs and surveyed facilitators who had completed or were enrolled in these programs between July and November 2023.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTorture
January 2025
Associate Professor, Faculty of Social Studies. VID Specialized University, Oslo. Correspondence to: anne.
Introduction: The concept of 'life project' is at the core of several decisions in the inter-American human rights system. The concept has also become part of the legal consciousness of torture survivors in Peru and is often referred to when they describe the impact of torture and imprisonment on their lives and on the lives of their children.
Methods: The paper is based on qualitative interviews with seven Peruvian torture survivors.
The objective of this Scientific Opinion is to assess the hazards and welfare consequences associated with the slaughter of horses for human consumption. The entire slaughter procedure, from arrival at the slaughterhouse until death, is divided into three phases: Phase 1 - pre-stunning, Phase 2 - stunning and Phase 3 - bleeding. Phase 1 includes the following processes (in chronological order): (a) arrival, (b) unloading of the animals from the vehicle, (c) lairage, (d) handling and moving to the stunning area and (e) restraint before application of the stunning method.
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