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Brain function in the vegetative state
Authors:Laureys Steven  Antoine Sylvie  Boly Melanie  Elincx Sandra  Faymonville Marie-Elisabeth  Berré Jacques  Sadzot Bernard  Ferring Martine  De Tiège Xavier  van Bogaert Patrick  Hansen Isabelle  Damas Pierre  Mavroudakis Nicolas  Lambermont Bernard  Del Fiore Guy  Aerts Joël  Degueldre Christian  Phillips Christophe  Franck George  Vincent Jean-Louis  Lamy Maurice  Luxen André  Moonen Gustave  Goldman Serge  Maquet Pierre
Affiliation:Cyclotron Research Center, Department of Neurology, CHU Sart Tilman, University of Liège, Liège, Belgium. steven.laureys@ulg.ac.be
Abstract:Positron emission tomography (PET) techniques represent a useful tool to better understand the residual brain function in vegetative state patients. It has been shown that overall cerebral metabolic rates for glucose are massively reduced in this condition. However, the recovery of consciousness from vegetative state is not always associated with substantial changes in global metabolism. This finding led us to hypothesize that some vegetative patients are unconscious not just because of a global loss of neuronal function, but rather due to an altered activity in some critical brain regions and to the abolished functional connections between them. We used voxel-based Statistical Parametric Mapping (SPM) approaches to characterize the functional neuroanatomy of the vegetative state. The most dysfunctional brain regions were bilateral frontal and parieto-temporal associative cortices. Despite the metabolic impairment, external stimulation still induced a significant neuronal activation (i.e., change in blood flow) in vegetative patients as shown by both auditory click stimuli and noxious somatosensory stimuli. However, this activation was limited to primary cortices and dissociated from higher-order associative cortices, thought to be necessary for conscious perception. Finally, we demonstrated that vegetative patients have impaired functional connections between distant cortical areas and between the thalami and the cortex and, more importantly, that recovery of consciousness is paralleled by a restoration of this cortico-thalamo-cortical interaction.
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