From the Center for Neurotechnology and Neurorecovery (S.B.S., Y.G.B., B.L.E.), Department of Neurology, and Department of Anesthesiology (E.N.B.), Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston; Department of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation (Y.G.B.), Spaulding Rehabilitation Hospital, Charlestown, MA; Department of Radiology (M.B., O.W., B.L.E.), Athinoula A. Martinos Center for Biomedical Imaging, Massachusetts General Hospital and Harvard Medical School, Charlestown; Department of Brain and Cognitive Sciences (E.N.B.), Massachusetts Institute of Technology; and Harvard-MIT Division of Health Science and Technology (E.N.B.), Cambridge, MA.
Neurology. 2019 Sep 24;93(13):e1281-e1287. doi: 10.1212/WNL.0000000000008163. Epub 2019 Sep 4.
To determine whether ascending arousal network (AAn) connectivity is reduced in patients presenting with traumatic coma.
We performed high-angular-resolution diffusion imaging in 16 patients with acute severe traumatic brain injury who were comatose on admission and in 16 matched controls. We used probabilistic tractography to measure the connectivity probability (CP) of AAn axonal pathways linking the brainstem tegmentum to the hypothalamus, thalamus, and basal forebrain. To assess the spatial specificity of CP differences between patients and controls, we also measured CP within 4 subcortical pathways outside the AAn.
Compared to controls, patients showed a reduction in AAn pathways connecting the brainstem tegmentum to a region of interest encompassing the hypothalamus, thalamus, and basal forebrain. When each pathway was examined individually, brainstem-hypothalamus and brainstem-thalamus CPs, but not brainstem-forebrain CP, were significantly reduced in patients. Only 1 subcortical pathway outside the AAn showed reduced CP in patients.
We provide initial evidence for the reduced integrity of axonal pathways linking the brainstem tegmentum to the hypothalamus and thalamus in patients presenting with traumatic coma. Our findings support current conceptual models of coma as being caused by subcortical AAn injury. AAn connectivity mapping provides an opportunity to advance the study of human coma and consciousness.
确定创伤性昏迷患者的上行觉醒网络(AAn)连接是否减少。
我们对 16 名入院时昏迷的急性严重创伤性脑损伤患者和 16 名匹配的对照者进行了高角分辨率扩散成像。我们使用概率追踪来测量将脑桥被盖与下丘脑、丘脑和基底前脑连接的 AAn 轴突通路的连接概率(CP)。为了评估患者和对照组之间 CP 差异的空间特异性,我们还测量了 AAn 以外的 4 条皮质下通路内的 CP。
与对照组相比,患者的脑桥被盖与包括下丘脑、丘脑和基底前脑在内的感兴趣区域之间的 AAn 通路减少。当单独检查每条通路时,患者的脑桥-下丘脑和脑桥-丘脑 CP 降低,但脑桥-前脑 CP 没有降低。只有 1 条 AAn 以外的皮质下通路在患者中 CP 降低。
我们提供了初步证据,证明创伤性昏迷患者的连接脑桥被盖与下丘脑和丘脑的轴突通路完整性降低。我们的发现支持昏迷作为皮质下 AAn 损伤引起的当前概念模型。AAn 连接性映射为研究人类昏迷和意识提供了机会。