• Am. J. Respir. Crit. Care Med. · Jan 2022

    Case Reports

    Brain Responses to Propofol in Advance of Recovery From Coma and Disorders of Consciousness: A Preliminary Study.

    • Catherine Duclos, Charlotte Maschke, Yacine Mahdid, Danielle Nadin, Alexander Rokos, Caroline Arbour, Mohamed Badawy, Justin Létourneau, Adrian M Owen, Gilles Plourde, and Stefanie Blain-Moraes.
    • School of Physical and Occupational Therapy.
    • Am. J. Respir. Crit. Care Med. 2022 Jan 15; 205 (2): 171-182.

    AbstractRationale: Predicting recovery of consciousness in unresponsive, brain-injured individuals has crucial implications for clinical decision-making. Propofol induces distinctive brain network reconfiguration in the healthy brain as it loses consciousness. In patients with disorders of consciousness, the brain network's reconfiguration to propofol may reveal the patient's underlying capacity for consciousness. Objectives: To design and test a new metric for the prognostication of consciousness recovery in disorders of consciousness. Methods: Using a within-subject design, we conducted an anesthetic protocol with concomitant high-density EEG in 12 patients with a disorder of consciousness after a brain injury. We quantified the reconfiguration of EEG network hubs and directed functional connectivity before, during, and after propofol exposure and obtained an index of propofol-induced network reconfiguration: the adaptive reconfiguration index. We compared the index of patients who recovered consciousness 3 months after EEG (n = 3) to that of patients who did not recover or remained in a chronic disorder of consciousness (n = 7) and conducted a logistic regression to assess prognostic accuracy. Measurements and Main Results: The adaptive reconfiguration index was significantly higher in patients who later recovered full consciousness (U value = 21, P = 0.008) and able to discriminate with 100% accuracy whether the patient recovered consciousness. Conclusions: The adaptive reconfiguration index of patients who recovered from a disorder of consciousness at 3-month follow-up was linearly separable from that of patients who did not recover or remained in a chronic disorder of consciousness on the single-subject level. EEG and propofol can be administered at the bedside with few contraindications, affording the adaptive reconfiguration index tremendous translational potential as a prognostic measure of consciousness recovery in acute clinical settings.

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