Abstract

ObjectiveClinical responsiveness of patients with a Disorder of Consciousness (DoC) correlates to sympathetic/parasympathetic homeostatic balance. Heart Rate Variability (HRV) metrics result in non-invasive proxies of modulation capabilities of visceral states. In this work, our aim was to evaluate whether HRV measures could improve the differential diagnosis between Unresponsive Wakefulness Syndrome (UWS) and Minimally Conscious State (MCS) with respect to multivariate models based on standard clinical electroencephalography (EEG) labeling only in a rehabilitation setting. MethodsA prospective observational study was performed consecutively enrolling 82 DoC patients. Polygraphic recordings were performed. HRV-metrics and EEG descriptors derived from the American Clinical Neurophysiology Society's Standardized Critical Care terminology were included. Descriptors entered univariate and then multivariate logistic regressions with the target set to the UWS/MCS diagnosis. ResultsHRV measures resulted significantly different between UWS and MCS patients, with higher values being associated with better consciousness levels. Specifically, adding HRV-related metrics to ACNS EEG descriptors increased the Nagelkerke R2 from 0.350 (only EEG descriptors) to 0.565 (HRV-EEG combination) with the outcome set to the consciousness diagnosis. ConclusionsHRV changes across the lowest states of consciousness. Rapid changes in heart rate, occurring in better consciousness levels, confirm the mutual correlation between visceral state functioning patterns and consciousness alterations. SignificanceQuantitative analysis of heart rate in patients with a DoC paves the way for the implementation of low-cost pipelines supporting medical decisions within multimodal consciousness assessments.

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