84b - Brain States and Coma Flashcards
List the following brain states from most responsive to least responsive:
Coma, obtundation, stupor
- Obtundation
- Most responsive
- Stupor
- Vague term, between alert an in a coma
- Patient can respond peruposefully, but requires constant stimulation
- Coma
- Unresponsive
- Patient cannot be stimulated to responsd purposefully
- Unresponsive
What is the medical definition of brain death?
- No purposeful response to any stimuli
- Including noxious stimuli
- No brainstem reflexes
- No spontaneous respiratory movments
- Clear underlying etiology
- Not due to medications or sedatives
May be present:
Simple reflexes, circadian rhythm, autonomic function
How will a patient with abulia present/act?
- Slowing of cognitive and behavioral function
- Intact cognitive function
- Apathy
Often caused by medial frontal lobe injuries
How can you tell if a patient is in a coma or “locked in”?
A person who is locked in may be able to move their eyes up in response to commands
- Patients with locked in syndrome are conscious, but unable to effectuate muscles
What is the difference between a vegetative state and a minimally conscious state?
- Vegetative state
- No purposeful response to stimuli
- No environmental awareness
- No brainstem reflexes
- No spontaneous repsiratory movements
- Eyes may open and rove randomly
- No purposeful response to stimuli
- Minimally conscous state
- May require respiratory support
- Behavioral evidence of self or environmental awareness
- Eyes may lock onto familiar faces, objects rather than just roving
Which part of the brain mediates arousal and sleep/wake changes?
Ascending reticular activating system (ARAS)
Damage to ARAS and/or pathway results in impaired arousal
What is the difference between a coma and a vegetative state?
Patinets who are brain-dead will progress from coma to vegetative state in 10-30 days
In both states, the patient cannot respond purposefully, has no respiratory drive, and no brainstem reflexes
- Coma
- No eye opening
- No circadian rhythm
- Vegetative state
- Circadian rhythm restored
- Periods of eye opening, roving eye movement
- Autonomic changes observed
Injury at which 3 areas of the brain can result in decreased level of arousal?
- Ascending Reticular Activating System in the midbrain
- Bilateral thalami
- Before ARAS branches off
- Both cerebral hemispheres
Other focal deficits will not impair arousal
What is the difference between abulia and akinetic mutism?
Both involve slowing of cognitive and behavior functions
Akinetic mutism is extreme abulia
Injury to the ______ results in locked in syndrome
Describe the syndrome
Injury to the pons results in locked in syndrome
Patients are paralyzed except upward eye movments - no cognitive impairment