scholarly journals Command following assessment and communication with vibro-tactile P300 and motor imagery BCIs in patients with disorders of consciousness and locked-in syndrome.

2018 ◽  
Vol 12 ◽  
Author(s):  
Christoph Guger ◽  
Rossella Spataro ◽  
Guenter Edlinger
2013 ◽  
Vol 124 (1) ◽  
pp. 101-106 ◽  
Author(s):  
Dorothée Lulé ◽  
Quentin Noirhomme ◽  
Sonja C. Kleih ◽  
Camille Chatelle ◽  
Sebastian Halder ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Davide Aloi ◽  
Roya Jalali ◽  
Penelope Tilsley ◽  
R. Chris Miall ◽  
Davinia Fernández-Espejo

AbstractTranscranial direct current stimulation (tDCS) is attracting increasing interest as a potential therapeutic route for unresponsive patients with prolonged disorders of consciousness (PDOC). However, research to date has had mixed results. Here, we propose a new direction by directly addressing the mechanisms underlying lack of responsiveness in PDOC, and using these to define our targets and the success of our intervention in the healthy brain first. We used fMRI to characterise the effects of tDCS on brain activity and dynamics during command following, a task typically used to clinically assess awareness. Anodal tDCS over M1 and cathodal tDCS over the cerebellum led to long-range changes in thalamo-cortical coupling associated with the ability to produce motor responses to command. This suggests that tDCS may allow PDOC patients to overcome the motor deficits at the root of their reduced responsiveness, improving their rehabilitation options and quality of life as a result.


Brain ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 143 (4) ◽  
pp. 1177-1189 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jiahui Pan ◽  
Qiuyou Xie ◽  
Pengmin Qin ◽  
Yan Chen ◽  
Yanbin He ◽  
...  

Abstract Cognitive motor dissociation describes a subset of patients with disorders of consciousness who show neuroimaging evidence of consciousness but no detectable command-following behaviours. Although essential for family counselling, decision-making, and the design of rehabilitation programmes, the prognosis for patients with cognitive motor dissociation remains under-investigated. The current study included 78 patients with disorders of consciousness who showed no detectable command-following behaviours. These patients included 45 patients with unresponsive wakefulness syndrome and 33 patients in a minimally conscious state, as diagnosed using the Coma Recovery Scale-Revised. Each patient underwent an EEG-based brain-computer interface experiment, in which he or she was instructed to perform an item-selection task (i.e. select a photograph or a number from two candidates). Patients who achieved statistically significant brain-computer interface accuracies were identified as cognitive motor dissociation. Two evaluations using the Coma Recovery Scale-Revised, one before the experiment and the other 3 months later, were carried out to measure the patients’ behavioural improvements. Among the 78 patients with disorders of consciousness, our results showed that within the unresponsive wakefulness syndrome patient group, 15 of 18 patients with cognitive motor dissociation (83.33%) regained consciousness, while only five of the other 27 unresponsive wakefulness syndrome patients without significant brain-computer interface accuracies (18.52%) regained consciousness. Furthermore, within the minimally conscious state patient group, 14 of 16 patients with cognitive motor dissociation (87.5%) showed improvements in their Coma Recovery Scale-Revised scores, whereas only four of the other 17 minimally conscious state patients without significant brain-computer interface accuracies (23.53%) had improved Coma Recovery Scale-Revised scores. Our results suggest that patients with cognitive motor dissociation have a better outcome than other patients. Our findings extend current knowledge of the prognosis for patients with cognitive motor dissociation and have important implications for brain-computer interface-based clinical diagnosis and prognosis for patients with disorders of consciousness.


2019 ◽  
Vol 29 (03) ◽  
pp. 1850048 ◽  
Author(s):  
Marian Dovgialo ◽  
Anna Chabuda ◽  
Anna Duszyk ◽  
Magdalena Zieleniewska ◽  
Marcin Pietrzak ◽  
...  

Disorders of consciousness (DOC) are among the major challenges of contemporary medicine, mostly due to the high rates of misdiagnoses in clinical assessment, based on behavioral scales. This turns our attention to potentially objective neuroimaging methods. Paradigms based on electroencephalography (EEG) are most suited for bedside applications, but sensitive to artifacts. These problems are especially pronounced in pediatric patients. We present the first study on the assessment of pediatric DOC patients by means of command-following procedures and involving long-latency cognitive event-related potentials. To deal with the above mentioned challenges, we construct a specialized signal processing scheme including artifact correction and rejection, parametrization, classification and final assessment of the statistical significance. To compensate for the possible bias of the tests involved in the final diagnosis, we propose the Monte Carlo evaluation of the processing pipeline. To compensate for possible sensory impairments of DOC patients, for each subject we check command-following responses to the stimuli in the major modalities: visual, tactile, and audio (words and sounds). We test the scheme on 20 healthy volunteers and present results for 15 patients from a hospital for children with severe brain damage, in relation to their behavioral diagnosis on the Coma Recovery Scale-Revised (CRS-R).


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