Close X
Saturday, December 28, 2024
ADVT 
National

Canadian researchers find signs of awareness in comatose patient, study says

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 04 Sep, 2024 04:12 PM
  • Canadian researchers find signs of awareness in comatose patient, study says

Researchers in London, Ont., say they were able to detect awareness in a comatose patient with a brain injury – a finding they say "opens the door" to providing better care with the hope of more accurately predicting critically injured patients' prognosis for recovery. 

A neuroimaging technique called functional near infrared spectroscopy (fNIRS) was used to shine light waves into three patients' brains to find activity in response to different commands, said a study published recently in The Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS) journal.

The patients had already been deemed clinically unresponsive, meaning they had not reacted when asked to give a thumbs up, wiggle their toes or open and close their eyes, said Karnig Kazazian, co-lead author of the study.

"By showing that some patients might still be 'in there' despite behaviourally showing no signs, you can imagine that this would really greatly influence that decision of whether or not you stay on life support or transition to passing away peacefully," said Kazazian, a research associate at Lawson Health Research Institute and the London Health Sciences Centre.

The fNIRS technology was first tested on more than 100 healthy participants to determine what tasks and commands were most effective at eliciting brain activity. The more light is absorbed, the more brain activity there is in a given part of the brain, Kazazian said. 

When the technology was used on the three comatose patients, one showed significant neurological activity in the premotor cortex — the part of the brain that imagines movement — when they were asked to imagine playing tennis.

"Previous work from our group has shown that you have to be conscious in order to imagine playing tennis. You have to be 'in there' because that's not something that you just automatically do without any awareness," Kazazian said.

The researchers repeated this exercise five times to be sure the response wasn't just a one-off, he said.

The researchers also saw activity in the part of the patient's brain responsible for processing auditory information when they played "complex stories," Kazazian said. 

In a less robust response, another unresponsive patient appeared to have the ability to passively perceive speech, the study found. A third patient showed no response to any of the task commands.

The findings build on previous research that suggests 15 per cent of comatose patients have some cognitive awareness even if they appear unresponsive, he said.

The functional near infrared spectroscopy is administered through a cap placed on the patient's head — eliminating the need to try to move them to another location in the hospital to do brain imaging, such as an MRI suite, Kazazian said. 

He said the technology should be made available to intensive care units across the country, as it could help doctors and family members decide whether to continue aggressive care if the patient shows signs of awareness.

Dr. Derek Debicki, senior author of the study, said the results are promising, even though it's "very early days" in the field of detecting awareness in otherwise unresponsive patients and linking that to a prediction of if and how they will recover. 

"Showing that this can actually be done in the ICU setting as a start really opens the door to be able to advance this technology further,” said Debicki, who is a neurologist specializing in neurocritical care at Western University. 

Kazazian, Debicki and the rest of their research team are currently enrolling other patients, with consent from their families, to get a bigger sample size and learn whether or not the brain activity detected is associated with a patient's prognosis.

"(We want to) try to understand what is the process of recovery from coma or from severe brain injury, and are there any markers that can help us better predict what functional outcomes might look like?” Debicki said. 

The team will also study whether or not the fNIRS technology can be used to communicate with patients while they are comatose, Kazazian said.

MORE National ARTICLES

Home sales fell in Vancouver in August

Home sales fell in Vancouver in August
Home sales in Greater Vancouver fell 17.1 per cent in August from the same period last year, according to the latest statistics. Greater Vancouver Realtors says there were a total of 19-hundred-and-four homes sold in the region last month, down from almost 23-hundred last year.

Home sales fell in Vancouver in August

Suspect in deadly Vancouver stranger attacks was on probation: VPD chief

Suspect in deadly Vancouver stranger attacks was on probation: VPD chief
Chief Constable Adam Palmer says the suspect, a 34-year-old White Rock man, appears to be "very troubled" and police are looking into whether mental health was a factor in this morning's "horrific" attacks. He says the man, who had a history of assaulting police and social workers, was tracked down with the help of a drone and arrested at Habitat Island, near the Olympic Village.

Suspect in deadly Vancouver stranger attacks was on probation: VPD chief

Review of B.C. refinery stench says cold snap triggered series of events

Review of B.C. refinery stench says cold snap triggered series of events
Parkland Corp. has released a review into an unplanned shutdown of its Burnaby, B.C., refinery in January that blanketed parts of Metro Vancouver with a foul stench. The review released last week says unusually cold weather triggered a series of events leading to the release of a noxious odour that generated more than 100 complaints from residents.

Review of B.C. refinery stench says cold snap triggered series of events

Man sentenced in child pornography

Man sentenced in child pornography
A New Westminster man has been sentenced to 10 months in jail after pleading guilty to possession child pornography. Police say 51-year-old Scott Harrison was originally arrested in April 2020 after officers begun investigating a case of child porn being uploaded onto the Internet.

Man sentenced in child pornography

VPD says one man dead, another's hand cut off, in stranger attacks

VPD says one man dead, another's hand cut off, in stranger attacks
Vancouver police say a man has been arrested after a pair of "unprovoked stranger attacks" in the city's downtown that left one man dead and severed another victim's hand. Chief Constable Adam Palmer says police believe the early morning attacks near the Queen Elizabeth Theatre were "completely random," and that such incidents "shake our collective sense of comfort and safety."

VPD says one man dead, another's hand cut off, in stranger attacks

'The deal is done:' NDP Leader pulls out of supply and confidence deal with Liberals

'The deal is done:' NDP Leader pulls out of supply and confidence deal with Liberals
NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh has "ripped up" the supply and confidence deal with the Liberals that helped keep the minority government in power. In a video posted Wednesday afternoon, Singh said he notified Prime Minister Justin Trudeau of the decision. 

'The deal is done:' NDP Leader pulls out of supply and confidence deal with Liberals

PrevNext