A publication in the Journal of Neuroscience

Heartbeat can help detect signs of consciousness in patients after a coma



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A new approach to assess self-awareness in patients who do not regain full consciousness after a coma, the result of a collaboration between the École normale supérieure - PSL (Paris), the University of Liège and the Centre du Cerveau (CHU Liège).

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 new study conducted jointly by the University of Liège (Belgium) and the École normale supérieure - PSL (France) shows that heart brain interactions, measured using electroencephalography (EEG), provide a novel diagnostic avenue for patients with disorders of consciousness. This study is published in the journal Journal of Neuroscience.

Catherine Tallon-Baudry (ENS, CNRS) introduces : “The scientific community already knew that in healthy participants, the brain’s response to heartbeats is related to perceptual, bodily and self-consciousness. We now show that we can obtain clinically meaningful information if we probe this interaction in patients with disorders of consciousness.” In the past decades several important improvements for the diagnosis of these patients have been made, yet, it remains a big challenge to measure self-consciousness in these patients that cannot communicate.

For their study, the researchers included 68 patients with a disorder of consciousness. Fifty-five patients suffered from the minimally conscious state, and showed fluctuating but consistent signs of consciousness but were unable to communicate, and 13 patients in the unresponsive wakefulness state (previously called vegetative state) who do not show any behavioural sign of awareness. These patients were diagnosed using the coma recovery scale-revised, a standardized clinical test to assess conscious behaviour.

“As these patients suffered from severe brain injury, they might be unable to show behavioural signs of awareness. Therefore, we also based our diagnosis on the brain’s metabolism as probe for consciousness. This is a state-of-the art neuroimaging technique that helps to improve the diagnosis of patients with disorders of consciousness. Although these scans are very informative, they can only be acquired in specialized centers,” says Jitka Annen (GIGA Consciousness, ULiège).

The researchers recorded brain activity during resting state (i.e. without specific task or stimulation). They selected EEG segments right after a heartbeat and EEG segments at random timepoints (i.e. not time-locked to a heartbeat). They then used machine learning algorithms to classify (or diagnose) patients into the two diagnostic groups.

Diego Candia-Rivera (ENS) further comments: “EEG segments not locked to heartbeats were informative to predict if a patient was conscious or not, but EEG segments locked to heartbeats were more accurate in doing so. Our results indicate that the heartbeat evoked potential can give us supplementary evidence for the presence of consciousness.”

It is important to note that the heartbeat evoked responses were more in accordance with the diagnosis based on brain metabolism than the diagnosis based on behavioural assessment. It seems therefore that the heartbeat evoked response can be used to measure a perspective of self-consciousness that is not assessed successfully using behavioural tools.

“The next challenge is to translate our findings to clinical applications so that all patients with disorders of consciousness can benefit from better diagnosis using widely available bedside assessment technologies,” concludes Steven Laureys, head of GIGA Consciousness research unit and Centre du Cerveau (ULiège, CHU Liège).

Scientific reference

Neural responses to heartbeats detect residual signs of consciousness during resting state in post-comatose patients, Diego Candia-Rivera, Jitka Annen, Olivia Gosseries, Charlotte Martial, Aurore Thibaut, Steven Laureys, Catherine Tallon-Baudry, Journal of Neuroscience, DOI:10.1523/JNEUROSCI.1740-20.2021

Contacts

Catherine Tallon-Baudry - Laboratoire de Neurosciences Cognitives et Computationnelles, Département d’Études cognitives, Écoles normale supérieur

Steven Laureys - GIGA Consciousness – ULiège & CHU de Liège

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