A Focus on Subtle Signs and Motor Behavior to Unveil Awareness in Unresponsive Brain-Impaired Patients: The Importance of Being Clinical.

Neurology

From the Neurology and Acute Neurorehabilitation Unit (K.D., I.A.M., J.J., P.R.), Department of Clinical Neurosciences, and Department of Radiology (V.D., P.P.), Lausanne University Hospital and University of Lausanne; University Hospital of Old Age Psychiatry (I.A.M.), University of Bern, Switzerland; Neurology Unit (A.P.), Department of Medicine, Hôpitaux Robert Schuman, Luxembourg; Department of Neuroscience (D.F.M.), Luliu Haţieganu University of Medicine and Pharmacy, Cluj-Napoca, Romania; Departments of Anesthesiology and Critical Care Medicine, Neurology, and Neurosurgery (R.D.S.), School of Medicine, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, MD; Feil Family Brain and Mind Research Institute (N.D.S.), Weill Cornell Medical College, New York, NY; and Department of Neurology (N.D.S.), New York Presbyterian Hospital.

Published: June 2023

Brain-injured patients in a state of cognitive motor dissociation (CMD) exhibit a lack of command following using conventional neurobehavioral examination tools but a high level of awareness and language processing when assessed using advanced imaging and electrophysiology techniques. Because of their behavioral unresponsiveness, patients with CMD may seem clinically indistinguishable from those with a true disorder of consciousness that affects awareness on a substantial level (coma, vegetative state/unresponsive wakefulness state, or minimally conscious state minus). Yet, by expanding the range of motor testing across limb, facial, and ocular motricity, we may detect subtle, purposeful movements even in the subset of patients classified as vegetative state/unresponsive wakefulness state. We propose the term of clinical CMD to describe patients showing these slight but determined motor responses and exhibiting a characteristic akinetic motor behavior as opposed to a pyramidal motor system behavior. These patients may harbor hidden cognitive capabilities and significant potential for a good long-term outcome. Indeed, we envision CMD as ranging from complete (no motor response) to partial (subtle clinical motor response) forms, falling within a spectrum of progressively better motor output in patients with considerable cognitive capabilities. In addition to providing a decisional flowchart, we present this novel approach to classification as a graphical model that illustrates the range of clinical manifestations and recovery trajectories fundamentally differentiating true disorders of consciousness from the spectrum of CMD.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10264055PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1212/WNL.0000000000207067DOI Listing

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