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To: MarMema

Find me one--documented in the medical literature.


148 posted on 06/16/2005 1:03:03 PM PDT by kozachka
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To: kozachka
Misdiagnosing the vegetative state after severe brain injury: the influence of medication.

Strens LH, Mazibrada G, Duncan JS, Greenwood R.

Sobell Department of Motor Neuroscience and Movement Disorders, Institute of Neurology, London, UK. l.strens@ion.ucl.ac.uk

Patients who suffer severe brain damage may be left unaware of self and of the environment and in a permanent vegetative state (PVS). The difficulties in correctly ascertaining unawareness after brain injury have been emphasized by a number of authors. It is well recognized that toxic-metabolic and drug-induced cerebral depression occurs acutely after brain injury. However, less attention has been drawn to the effects of medication months after brain injury and the way in which medication may confound assessment of awareness and, thus, the reliable assessment of long-term prognosis. This paper describes two patients who sustained a severe and well-documented structural brain injury, one hypoxic and one traumatic. Both were unaware when first seen at 3 months post-injury, but both have made useful functional recovery. The paper discusses their progress and how the early prescription of large doses of anti-epileptic drugs, sedatives and anti-spastic agents in these circumstances may result in an initial misdiagnosis of the vegetative state.

151 posted on 06/16/2005 1:15:41 PM PDT by MarMema
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To: kozachka
Prediction of recovery from post-traumatic vegetative state with cerebral magnetic-resonance imaging.

Kampfl A, Schmutzhard E, Franz G, Pfausler B, Haring HP, Ulmer H, Felber S, Golaszewski S, Aichner F.

Department of Neurology, University Hospital Innsbruck, Austria.

BACKGROUND: The early post-traumatic vegetative state (VS) is compatible with recovery. Various clinical and laboratory tests have failed to predict recovery so we assessed the value of cerebral magnetic-resonance imaging (MRI) in prediction of recovery. METHODS: 80 adult patients in post-traumatic VS had cerebral MRI between 6 weeks and 8 weeks after injury. MRIs were reviewed by three neuroradiologists for the number, sizes, and location of brain lesions. Three neurologists assessed the patients at the time of MRI and at 2 months, 3 months, 6 months, 9 months, and 12 months after injury using the Glasgow Outcome Scale. FINDINGS: At 12 months, 38 patients had recovered while 42 patients remained in the VS. The demographic characteristics and causes and severity of injury were similar in patients in persistent VS (PVS) and those who recovered (NPVS). An average of 6.1 different brain areas were injured in patients in PVS compared with 4.6 areas in patients who had NPVS. Patients in PVS revealed a significantly higher frequency of corpus callosum, corona radiata, and dorsolateral brainstem injuries than did patients who recovered. Logistic regression analysis showed that corpus callosum and dorsolateral brainstem injuries were predictive of non-recovery. The adjusted odds ratios for non-recovery of patients with a corpus callosum lesion and dorsolateral brainstem injury were 213.8 (95% CI 14.2-3213.3), and 6.9 (11-42.9), respectively. In contrast, clinical characteristics, such as initial score on the Glasgow Coma Scale, age, and pupillary abnormalities failed to predict recovery. INTERPRETATION: Cerebral MRI findings in the subacute stage after head injury can predict the outcome of the post-traumatic VS. Corpus callosum and dorsolateral brainstem lesions are highly significant in predicting non-recovery.

152 posted on 06/16/2005 1:17:36 PM PDT by MarMema
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To: kozachka
Recovery of cognition from persistent vegetative state in a child with normal somatosensory evoked potentials.

Tsao CY, Ellingson RJ, Wright FS.

Department of Pediatrics, Children's Hospital, Ohio State University, Columbus 43205.

The absence of bilateral early cortical SEPs in a PVS due to nontraumatic coma is usually associated with failure to recover cognition or awareness, although rarely patients with bilaterally absent cortical SEPs in posttraumatic PVS may regain cognition. On the other hand, normal cortical SEPs in nontraumatic coma may be related to favorable outcomes as shown in this patient and other reports. Our patient is unique in that he had had serial normal SEPs, was in a PVS for 7 1/2 months, and recovered cognition, but not without cost in terms of damage to intellectual capability. Further long-term clinical follow-up studies to correlate clinical outcome with serial SEP data may be indicated.

153 posted on 06/16/2005 1:19:37 PM PDT by MarMema
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