Peri-Personal Space Tracing by Hand-Blink Reflex Modulation in Patients with Chronic Disorders of Consciousness
Autor: | Alfredo Manuli, Rocco Salvatore Calabrò, Antonino Cannavò, Antonino Naro, Luana Billeri, Placido Bramanti, Antonino Chillura, Antonio Buda, Francesco Molonia |
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Jazyk: | angličtina |
Rok vydání: | 2020 |
Předmět: |
0301 basic medicine
Adult Male medicine.medical_specialty Consciousness lcsh:Medicine Electromyography Audiology Article Diagnosis Differential 03 medical and health sciences Personal Space 0302 clinical medicine medicine Humans Corneal reflex Coma lcsh:Science Aged Disorders of consciousness Multidisciplinary medicine.diagnostic_test Blinking business.industry Persistent Vegetative State lcsh:R Minimally conscious state Middle Aged medicine.disease Hand Median nerve Electrophysiology 030104 developmental biology Central nervous system Reflex Consciousness Disorders lcsh:Q Wakefulness Female Brainstem business Metacognition 030217 neurology & neurosurgery Psychomotor Performance |
Zdroj: | Scientific Reports Scientific Reports, Vol 10, Iss 1, Pp 1-14 (2020) |
ISSN: | 2045-2322 |
Popis: | The assessment of awareness in patients with chronic Disorders of Consciousness (DoC), including Unresponsive Wakefulness Syndrome (UWS) and Minimally Conscious State (MCS), is challenging. The level of awareness impairment may depend on the degree of deterioration of the large-scale cortical-thalamo-cortical networks induced by brain injury. Electrophysiological approaches may shed light on awareness presence in patients with DoC by estimating cortical functions related to the cortical-thalamo-cortical networks including, for example, the cortico-subcortical processes generating motor responses to the perturbation of the peri-personal space (PPS). We measured the amplitude, latency, and duration of the hand-blink reflex (HBR) responses by recording electromyography (EMG) signals from both the orbicularis oculi muscles while electrically stimulating the median nerve at the wrist. Such a BR is thought to be mediated by a neural circuit at the brainstem level. Despite its defensive-response nature, HBR can be modulated by the distance between the stimulated hand and the face. This suggests a functional top-down control of HBR as reflected by HBR features changes (latency, amplitude, and magnitude). We therefore estimated HBR responses in a sample of patients with DoC (8 MCS and 12 UWS, compared to 15 healthy controls −HC) while performing a motor task targeting the PPS. This consisted of passive movements in which the hand of the subject was positioned at different distances from the participant’s face. We aimed at demonstrating a residual top-down modulation of HBR properties, which could be useful to differentiate patients with DoC and, potentially, demonstrate awareness preservation. We found a decrease in latency, and an increase in duration and magnitude of HBR responses, which were all inversely related to the hand-to-face distance in HC and patients with MCS, but not in individuals with UWS. Our data suggest that only patients with MCS have preserved, residual, top-down modulation of the processes related to the PPS from higher-order cortical areas to sensory-motor integration network. Although the sample size was relatively small, being thus our data preliminary, HBR assessment seems a rapid, easy, and first-level tool to differentiate patients with MCS from those with UWS. We may also hypothesize that such a HBR modulation suggests awareness preservation. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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