1 results match your criteria: "New York University (J.-R.K.) - both in New York.[Affiliation]"
N Engl J Med
June 2019
From the Departments of Neurology (J.C., K.D., A.M., C.C., K.M.B., A.V., J.U.O., S.P., S.A., D.R., M.M., A.E., B.R.) and Neurosurgery (E.S.C.), Columbia University, and the Department of Psychology, New York University (J.-R.K.) - both in New York.
Background: Brain activation in response to spoken motor commands can be detected by electroencephalography (EEG) in clinically unresponsive patients. The prevalence and prognostic importance of a dissociation between commanded motor behavior and brain activation in the first few days after brain injury are not well understood.
Methods: We studied a prospective, consecutive series of patients in a single intensive care unit who had acute brain injury from a variety of causes and who were unresponsive to spoken commands, including some patients with the ability to localize painful stimuli or to fixate on or track visual stimuli.