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BCI Performance and Brain Metabolism Profile in Severely Brain-Injured Patients Without Response to Command at Bedside

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2018

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Frontiers Media S.A.
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Annen, Jitka, Séverine Blandiaux, Nicolas Lejeune, Mohamed A. Bahri, Aurore Thibaut, Woosang Cho, Christoph Guger, Camille Chatelle, and Steven Laureys. 2018. “BCI Performance and Brain Metabolism Profile in Severely Brain-Injured Patients Without Response to Command at Bedside.” Frontiers in Neuroscience 12 (1): 370. doi:10.3389/fnins.2018.00370. http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fnins.2018.00370.

Abstract

Detection and interpretation of signs of “covert command following” in patients with disorders of consciousness (DOC) remains a challenge for clinicians. In this study, we used a tactile P3-based BCI in 12 patients without behavioral command following, attempting to establish “covert command following.” These results were then confronted to cerebral metabolism preservation as measured with glucose PET (FDG-PET). One patient showed “covert command following” (i.e., above-threshold BCI performance) during the active tactile paradigm. This patient also showed a higher cerebral glucose metabolism within the language network (presumably required for command following) when compared with the other patients without “covert command-following” but having a cerebral glucose metabolism indicative of minimally conscious state. Our results suggest that the P3-based BCI might probe “covert command following” in patients without behavioral response to command and therefore could be a valuable addition in the clinical assessment of patients with DOC.

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covert command following, P3, FDG-PET, disorders of consciousness, consciousness, brain computer interface

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