consciousness Flashcards
altered conscious level: define the main altered states of consciousness and explain the Glasgow Coma Score (GCS)
3 disorders of consciousness
coma, vegetative state, mimimally conscious state
what 2 disorders are not of consciousness
brainstem death, locked in syndrome
define coma
state if unrousable unresponsiveness, lasting more than 6 hours, where person can’t be awakened, respond normally to painful stimuli, light and sound, lacks normal sleep-wake cycle, and doesn’t initiate voluntary actions (no arousal or awareness)
define vegetative state
state of wakefulness without awareness in which there’s preserved capacity for spontaneous or stimulus-induced arousal, evidenced by sleep-wake cycles and range of reflexive and spontaneous behaviours (arousal with no awareness)
what is vegetative state characterised by
complete absence of behavioural evidence for self or environmental awareness
define minimally conscious state
state of severely altered consciousness in which minimal but clearly discernible behavioural evidence of self or environmental awareness is demonstrated (arousal but very limited awareness)
what is minimally conscious state characterised by
inconsistent but reproducible responses above level of spontaneous or reflexive behaviour, indicating some degree of interaction with surroundings
slide 56
slide 56
what is damaged in vegetitive state
cortex and hemispheres
what is damaged in locked-in syndrome
ventral pons
what is damaged in brainstem death
brainstem
what is covert awareness in disorders of consciousness based on, and why is it used
tennis imagery and spatial navigation imagery, have distinct specific brain activity locations which can be detected
visual neglect in disorders of consciousness vs hemianopia
hemianopia would perceive things still as know to compensate, but in visual neglect in disorders of consciousness perception removed
what score on Glasgow coma scale indicates severe brain injury and brain death
3
3 assessments on Glasgow coma scale and range
eyes open (4: none -> spontaneous), verbal responses (5: none -> oriented speech), motor responses (6: none -> obeys commands)