Schabus Manuel, Pelikan Christoph, Chwala-Schlegel Nicole, Weilhart Katharina, Roehm Dietmar, Donis Johann, Michitsch Gabriele, Pichler Gerald, Klimesch Wolfgang
Laboratory for Sleep and Consciousness Research, Division of Physiological Psychology, University of Salzburg, Austria.
Funct Neurol. 2011 Jan-Mar;26(1):31-6.
Patients with altered states of consciousness continue to constitute a major challenge in terms of clinical assessment, treatment and daily management. Furthermore, the exploration of brain function in severely brain-damaged patients represents a unique lesional approach to the scientific study of consciousness. Electroencephalography is one means of identifying covert behaviour in the absence of motor activity in these critically ill patients. Here we focus on a language processing task which assesses whether vegetative (n=10) and minimally conscious state patients (n=4) (vs control subjects, n=14) understand semantic information on a sentence level ("The opposite of black is... white/yellow/nice"). Results indicate that only MCS but not VS patients show differential processing of unrelated ("nice") and antonym ("white") words in the form of parietal alpha (10-12Hz) event-related synchronization and desynchronization (ERS/ERD), respectively. Controls show a more typical pattern, characterized by alpha ERD in response to unrelated words and alpha ERS in response to antonyms.
意识状态改变的患者在临床评估、治疗及日常管理方面仍然构成重大挑战。此外,对重度脑损伤患者脑功能的探索代表了一种研究意识科学的独特损伤性方法。脑电图是识别这些重症患者在无运动活动时的隐蔽行为的一种手段。在此,我们聚焦于一项语言处理任务,该任务评估植物状态患者(n = 10)和最低意识状态患者(n = 4)(与对照组,n = 14)是否能在句子层面理解语义信息(“黑色的反义词是……白色/黄色/好的”)。结果表明,只有最低意识状态患者而非植物状态患者分别以顶叶阿尔法(10 - 12Hz)事件相关同步化和去同步化(ERS/ERD)的形式对无关词(“好的”)和反义词(“白色”)表现出不同的处理。对照组表现出更典型的模式,其特征是对无关词有阿尔法去同步化,对反义词有阿尔法同步化。