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Do Patients Thought to Lack Consciousness Retain the Capacity for Internal as Well as External Awareness?

It is well established that some patients, who are deemed to have disorders of consciousness, remain entirely behaviorally non-responsive and are diagnosed as being in a vegetative state, yet can nevertheless demonstrate covert awareness of their external environment by modulating their brain activi...

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Autores principales: Haugg, Amelie, Cusack, Rhodri, Gonzalez-Lara, Laura E., Sorger, Bettina, Owen, Adrian M., Naci, Lorina
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Frontiers Media S.A. 2018
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6030833/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29997565
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fneur.2018.00492
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author Haugg, Amelie
Cusack, Rhodri
Gonzalez-Lara, Laura E.
Sorger, Bettina
Owen, Adrian M.
Naci, Lorina
author_facet Haugg, Amelie
Cusack, Rhodri
Gonzalez-Lara, Laura E.
Sorger, Bettina
Owen, Adrian M.
Naci, Lorina
author_sort Haugg, Amelie
collection PubMed
description It is well established that some patients, who are deemed to have disorders of consciousness, remain entirely behaviorally non-responsive and are diagnosed as being in a vegetative state, yet can nevertheless demonstrate covert awareness of their external environment by modulating their brain activity, a phenomenon known as cognitive-motor dissociation. However, the extent to which these patients retain internal awareness remains unknown. To investigate the potential for internal and external awareness in patients with chronic disorders of consciousness (DoC), we asked whether the pattern of juxtaposition between the functional time-courses of the default mode (DMN) and fronto-parietal networks, shown in healthy individuals to mediate the naturally occurring dominance switching between internal and external aspects of consciousness, was present in these patients. We used a highly engaging movie by Alfred Hitchcock to drive the recruitment of the fronto-parietal networks, including the dorsal attention (DAN) and executive control (ECN) networks, and their maximal juxtaposition to the DMN in response to the complex stimulus, relative to rest and a scrambled, meaningless movie baseline condition. We tested a control group of healthy participants (N = 13/12) and two groups of patients with disorders of consciousness, one comprised of patients who demonstrated independent, neuroimaging-based evidence of covert external awareness (N = 8), and the other of those who did not (N = 8). Similarly to the healthy controls, only the group of patients with overt and, critically, covert external awareness showed significantly heightened differentiation between the DMN and the DAN in response to movie viewing relative to their resting state time-courses, which was driven by the movie's narrative. This result suggested the presence of functional integrity in the DMN and fronto-parietal networks and their relationship to one another in patients with covert external awareness. Similar to the effect in healthy controls, these networks became more strongly juxtaposed to one another in response to movie viewing relative to the baseline conditions, suggesting the potential for internal and external awareness during complex stimulus processing. Furthermore, our results suggest that naturalistic paradigms can dissociate between groups of DoC patients with and without covert awareness based on the functional integrity of brain networks.
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spelling pubmed-60308332018-07-11 Do Patients Thought to Lack Consciousness Retain the Capacity for Internal as Well as External Awareness? Haugg, Amelie Cusack, Rhodri Gonzalez-Lara, Laura E. Sorger, Bettina Owen, Adrian M. Naci, Lorina Front Neurol Neurology It is well established that some patients, who are deemed to have disorders of consciousness, remain entirely behaviorally non-responsive and are diagnosed as being in a vegetative state, yet can nevertheless demonstrate covert awareness of their external environment by modulating their brain activity, a phenomenon known as cognitive-motor dissociation. However, the extent to which these patients retain internal awareness remains unknown. To investigate the potential for internal and external awareness in patients with chronic disorders of consciousness (DoC), we asked whether the pattern of juxtaposition between the functional time-courses of the default mode (DMN) and fronto-parietal networks, shown in healthy individuals to mediate the naturally occurring dominance switching between internal and external aspects of consciousness, was present in these patients. We used a highly engaging movie by Alfred Hitchcock to drive the recruitment of the fronto-parietal networks, including the dorsal attention (DAN) and executive control (ECN) networks, and their maximal juxtaposition to the DMN in response to the complex stimulus, relative to rest and a scrambled, meaningless movie baseline condition. We tested a control group of healthy participants (N = 13/12) and two groups of patients with disorders of consciousness, one comprised of patients who demonstrated independent, neuroimaging-based evidence of covert external awareness (N = 8), and the other of those who did not (N = 8). Similarly to the healthy controls, only the group of patients with overt and, critically, covert external awareness showed significantly heightened differentiation between the DMN and the DAN in response to movie viewing relative to their resting state time-courses, which was driven by the movie's narrative. This result suggested the presence of functional integrity in the DMN and fronto-parietal networks and their relationship to one another in patients with covert external awareness. Similar to the effect in healthy controls, these networks became more strongly juxtaposed to one another in response to movie viewing relative to the baseline conditions, suggesting the potential for internal and external awareness during complex stimulus processing. Furthermore, our results suggest that naturalistic paradigms can dissociate between groups of DoC patients with and without covert awareness based on the functional integrity of brain networks. Frontiers Media S.A. 2018-06-27 /pmc/articles/PMC6030833/ /pubmed/29997565 http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fneur.2018.00492 Text en Copyright © 2018 Haugg, Cusack, Gonzalez-Lara, Sorger, Owen and Naci. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) and the copyright owner are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.
spellingShingle Neurology
Haugg, Amelie
Cusack, Rhodri
Gonzalez-Lara, Laura E.
Sorger, Bettina
Owen, Adrian M.
Naci, Lorina
Do Patients Thought to Lack Consciousness Retain the Capacity for Internal as Well as External Awareness?
title Do Patients Thought to Lack Consciousness Retain the Capacity for Internal as Well as External Awareness?
title_full Do Patients Thought to Lack Consciousness Retain the Capacity for Internal as Well as External Awareness?
title_fullStr Do Patients Thought to Lack Consciousness Retain the Capacity for Internal as Well as External Awareness?
title_full_unstemmed Do Patients Thought to Lack Consciousness Retain the Capacity for Internal as Well as External Awareness?
title_short Do Patients Thought to Lack Consciousness Retain the Capacity for Internal as Well as External Awareness?
title_sort do patients thought to lack consciousness retain the capacity for internal as well as external awareness?
topic Neurology
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6030833/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29997565
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fneur.2018.00492
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