Abstract

Aims and Objectives: To facilitate individualized assessment of unresponsive patients in the intensive care unit for signs of preserved consciousness after acute brain injury.Background: Physicians and neuroscientists are increasingly recognizing a disturbing dilemma: Brain-injured patients who appear entirely unresponsive at the bedside may show signs of covert consciousness when examined by functional MRI (fMRI) or electroencephalography (EEG). According to a recent meta-analysis, roughly 15% of behaviorally unresponsive brain-injured patients can participate in mental tasks by modifying their brain activity during EEG- or fMRI-based paradigms, suggesting that they are conscious and misdiagnosed. This has major ethical and practical implications, including prognosis, treatment, resource allocation, and end-of-life decisions. However, EEG- or fMRI-based paradigms have so far typically been tested in chronic brain injury. Hence, as a novel approach, CONNECT-ME will import the full range of consciousness paradigms into neurocritical care.Methods: We will assess intensive care patients with acute brain injury for preserved consciousness by serial and multimodal evaluation using active, passive and resting state fMRI and EEG paradigms, as well as state-of-the-art clinical techniques including pupillometry and sophisticated clinical rating scales such as the Coma Recovery Scale-Revised. In addition, we are establishing a biobank (blood, cerebrospinal fluid and brain tissue, where available) to facilitate future genomic and microbiomic research to search for signatures of consciousness recovery.Discussion: We anticipate that this multimodal approach will add vital clinical information, including detection of preserved consciousness in patients previously thought of as unconscious, and improved (i.e., personalized) prognostication of individual patients. Our aim is two-fold: We wish to establish a cutting-edge tertiary care clinical service for unresponsive patients in the intensive care unit and lay the foundation for a fruitful multidisciplinary research environment for the study of consciousness in acute brain injury. Of note, CONNECT-ME will not only enhance our understanding of consciousness disorders in acute brain injury but it will also raise awareness for these patients who, for obvious reasons, have lacked a voice so far.Trial registration: The study is registered with clinicaltrials.org (ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT02644265).

Highlights

  • Searching for consciousness in patients with acute brain injury by means of clinical examination is difficult because patients must be awake, they must possess the voluntary drive to mobilize motor function, and this motor function must be preserved to a degree that is measurable

  • Work Package 9 (Full Clinical Service) Once we have shown that comprehensive functional magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) (fMRI)- and EEG-based consciousness paradigms are feasible in patients with acute brain injury in the intensive care unit (ICU) and intermediate care units, we wish to establish a full clinical service and a national referral center for the evaluation of disorders of consciousness (DoC) patients following acute brain injury

  • CONNECT-ME aims at improving the diagnosis, prognostication, and care of arguably the most vulnerable patient group that exists, i.e., patients in the intensive care unit who are unresponsive and unable to communicate because of decreased consciousness following acute brain injury

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Summary

Introduction

Searching for consciousness in patients with acute brain injury by means of clinical examination is difficult because patients must be awake, they must possess the voluntary drive to mobilize motor function, and this motor function must be preserved to a degree that is measurable. Many patients with disorders of consciousness (DoC) are incorrectly classified as being in a vegetative state (VS) [5] This has major ethical and practical implications for patients and their caregivers, including prognosis, treatment, resource allocation, and end-of-life decisions [6,7,8,9,10]. According to a recent meta-analysis, roughly 15% of behaviorally unresponsive brain-injured patients can participate in mental tasks by modifying their brain activity during EEG- or fMRI-based paradigms, suggesting that they are conscious and misdiagnosed This has major ethical and practical implications, including prognosis, treatment, resource allocation, and end-of-life decisions. As a novel approach, CONNECT-ME will import the full range of consciousness paradigms into neurocritical care

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