2011
DOI: 10.3389/fnhum.2011.00005
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Functional Imaging Reveals Movement Preparatory Activity in the Vegetative State

Abstract: The vegetative state (VS) is characterized by the absence of awareness of self or the environment and preserved autonomic functions. The diagnosis relies critically on the lack of consistent signs of purposeful behavior in response to external stimulation. Yet, given that patients with disorders of consciousness often exhibit fragmented movement patterns, voluntary actions may go unnoticed. Here we designed a simple motor paradigm that could potentially detect signs of purposeful behavior in VS patients with m… Show more

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Cited by 101 publications
(100 citation statements)
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“…a Denotes a minimally conscious state b Denotes a minimally conscious state except for anoxic aetiology [70] c Denotes emergence from the minimally conscious state activation) [61] and imagine swimming (resulting in supplementary motor area activation) [62]. Concurrently, cheaper and portable techniques using event related potential or electromyography active paradigms have been developed to detect possible signs of command following not assessable by clinical behavioural examination.…”
Section: Para-clinical Neuroimaging Assessment Independent Of Motor Rmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…a Denotes a minimally conscious state b Denotes a minimally conscious state except for anoxic aetiology [70] c Denotes emergence from the minimally conscious state activation) [61] and imagine swimming (resulting in supplementary motor area activation) [62]. Concurrently, cheaper and portable techniques using event related potential or electromyography active paradigms have been developed to detect possible signs of command following not assessable by clinical behavioural examination.…”
Section: Para-clinical Neuroimaging Assessment Independent Of Motor Rmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…84 Patients with DOC are asked to perform cognitive tasks in motor (for example, "imagine playing tennis"), visuospatial (for example, "imagine walking around in your house") or visual (for example, "look at the face") domains. 21,[85][86][87][88][89] This approach provided an opportunity to ask yes-no questions to a patient with an initial clinical diagnosis of VS (but later shown to be in MCS). 85 It should be stressed, however, that many of the tested patients in MCS who showed behavioural signs of command-following failed to show a response to these active fMRI tests, leading to false-negative findings.…”
Section: Functional Mrimentioning
confidence: 99%
“…These specific activation patterns were not different from those previously observed in a cohort of healthy volunteers [38]. Since this report, similar command-following paradigms in patients with DOC have asked patients to 'look at a screen and silently name the objects as they appear' (resulting in language network activation) [39], 'move your hand' (resulting in premotor cortex activation) [40], 'imagine swimming' (resulting in supplementary motor area activation) [41] and recently also to 'focus on either the face or house of an overlaid image' [42].…”
Section: Functional Neuroimaging and Electrophysiology As Tools For Commentioning
confidence: 55%