Friday, May 29, 2026
ADVT 
Health

Brain Scans Reveal Hidden Consciousness In Patients

The Canadian Press, 26 May, 2016 11:45 AM
    NEW YORK — A standard brain scanning technique is showing promise for helping doctors distinguish between patients in a vegetative state and those with hidden signs of consciousness.
     
    A study released Thursday is the latest to investigate using technology to help meet the challenge of making that distinction, which now is generally based on a doctor's bedside exam.
     
    Patients in a vegetative state have open eyes and show periods of sleep and wakefulness, but they are unaware of themselves or others and unable to think, respond or do anything on purpose. Patients in a minimally conscious state show only intermittent and minimal signs of awareness of themselves or their environment.
     
    Distinguishing between those two conditions is important because patients with even minimal awareness can be treated to help them communicate and to prevent suffering. They respond much better to stimulation from medication or sounds, touch, music and odours.
     
     
    In the new research, released by the journal Current Biology, researchers from Denmark, Belgium and Yale University investigated using so-called FDG-PET scans to measure the brain's consumption of blood sugar, which brain cells use as fuel. They sought to establish a specific level of consumption that could distinguish between the two groups of patients.
     
    They studied 49 vegetative patients and 65 minimally conscious ones, diagnosed by standard bedside procedures. They found that using a particular cutoff for PET scan results, they could correctly identify patient status 88 per cent of the time.
     
    The researchers checked the patient status again a year later. They found that 8 of the 11 vegetative patients who had scored above the cutoff, which had been associated with minimal consciousness, had in fact recovered consciousness. The other three had died.
     
    Three minimally conscious patients had scored below the cutoff. Of the two patients the researchers could find a record for, one showed no change and the other had died.
     
    Dr. Nicholas Schiff, a professor of neurology and neuroscience at the Weill Cornell Medical College in New York, who didn't participate in the work, called the work "very important." Such tests could encourage early diagnosis and promote proper care, he said.

    MORE Health ARTICLES

    Internal body clock puzzle solved

    Internal body clock puzzle solved
    Our internal body clock, influenced by the exposure to light, dictates the wake-sleep cycle.

    Internal body clock puzzle solved

    Want to be happy? Be extrovert

    Want to be happy? Be extrovert
    If happiness is what you are seeking, just be yourself - call an old friend to dinner or smile at a passerby - as a study has found that people with outgoing behaviour are a happier lot across cultures.

    Want to be happy? Be extrovert

    Bedtime TV affects kids' sleep badly

    Bedtime TV affects kids' sleep badly
    Kids who watch more television sleep for shorter duration, a study has confirmed.

    Bedtime TV affects kids' sleep badly

    Ladies! Watch your weight to cut breast cancer risk

    Ladies! Watch your weight to cut breast cancer risk
    Gear up for some physical exercise sessions as the risk of breast cancer may go up by 210 percent in obese and overweight women with a certain genetic marker, said a study.

    Ladies! Watch your weight to cut breast cancer risk

    Doctors can now grow engineered vaginas in women

    Doctors can now grow engineered vaginas in women
    In a major breakthrough, scientists are now growing specialised organs such as vagina in the lab and successfully implanting them in patients. Four teenage girls received such an implant and the organs are working “normally” now, a study has said.

    Doctors can now grow engineered vaginas in women

    Astronauts' pee to get recycled into clean water

    Astronauts' pee to get recycled into clean water
    In between the news about water on Mars, clues of life on Jupiter or new stars being formed at our galaxy's edge, there is a less glamorous side of space exploration: what to do with astronauts' urine!

    Astronauts' pee to get recycled into clean water