|
MRI Suggests Awareness in "Minimally
Conscious"
Tuesday November 13
By E.J. Mundell
NEW YORK (Reuters Health)
- Although they may be only able to communicate briefly and
in the most basic way, MRI data suggest that patients in a "minimally
conscious" state are aware of the world around them.
These patients' "understanding or interaction may be greater"
than it appears to family, caregivers and friends, according
to Dr. Joy Hirsch, a neurologist at Memorial Sloan-Kettering
Cancer Center in New York. Her research was presented Tuesday
at the Society for Neuroscience's annual meeting in San Diego,
California.
Each year over 200,000 individuals in the US sustain serious
brain injury resulting in significant neurological damage. Close
to half of these patients will permanently lose the ability
to live and function on their own, according to experts.
Compared with patients in a persistent vegetative state, "minimally
conscious" patients display occasional, inconsistent signs of
consciousness.
"For example," Dr. Hirsch said, "on one occasion a patient may
be able to vocalize the name of a family member but then not
be able to repeat that name for another 6 months." Or the patient
might one day draw in on a straw, move their eyes in response
to a question or grasp a family member's hand.
"Unfortunately, we do not know what this means in terms of the
patient's [overall] level of consciousness or potential for
recovery of function," Dr. Hirsch explained, and crucial questions--"Can
they hear me? Do they understand?"--remain unanswered for family
and friends.
Attempting to delve deeper into this mystery, the New York researchers
used functional MRI (fMRI) to evaluate two minimally conscious
male patients, 22 and 33 years old, both of whom had been unable
to communicate consistently since their respective accidents.
The researchers played two audio tapes as the patients underwent
fMRI scanning. In one tape, a friend or family member recited
a short narrative of some kind. In the second audio test, the
investigators simply ran the tape backwards--it was still recognizable
as human speech, but became meaningless and garbled.
In an interview with Reuters Health, Dr. Hirsch and her colleague
Dr. Nicholas Schiff said that speech processing areas of the
brain showed high activity during the forward-playing storytelling,
much as they would in healthy individuals. However, this activity
subsided when patients were exposed to the nonsense/backwards
tape.
The investigators conclude that the neurological tools necessary
for the understanding of speech "appear to be operational" in
these patients, which suggests that "certain brain functions
are more preserved than previously imagined." But they stressed
the findings "do not indicate what level of understanding--or
possible suffering--if any, is present."
More study is needed to better understand just how conscious
the minimally conscious are. Still, Dr. Hirsch believes the
findings give researchers a new "humanitarian imperative" to
continue to seek therapies for these patients.
|