Could This Portable, Cost-Effective Device Save Lives of Patients Thought in Vegetative State?
- Posted on November 10, 2011 at 2:09pm by
Liz Klimas
- Print »
- Email »
NEW YORK (The Blaze/AP) — There has long been controversy over whether patients in vegetative state — an unconscious state that lasts for at least a few weeks — actually have some sort of consciousness that isn’t being detected. Now, a new study using a portable brain monitor has shown that a few patients thought to be in a vegetative state do have some awareness.

Damian Cruse, the lead writer on a study published today in The Lancet, demonstrates a new method using electroencephalography (EEG) to diagnosis individuals possibly diagnosed incorrectly as vegetative state patients. (Photo: University of Western Ontario)
Researchers used an EEG machine to examine brain waves and found that three of 16 vegetative patients could understand what they heard and follow instructions.
EEG machines are far more common and less expensive than the large functional MRI scanners that have shown awareness in some vegetative patients in previous studies. So they could be set up in a patient’s room, avoiding logistical problems that can make it dangerous or impossible to have a vegetative patient scanned at an fMRI facility, researchers said.
Watch the researchers explain the benefits of EEG in evaluating patients for consciousness:
“We can take this assessment out into the community, to the patients. … We can go to that bedside and find out what level of awareness they still have,” said Damian Cruse, of the University of Western Ontario in Canada, an author of the report.
The technique might also provide a way for some vegetative patients to communicate. That could enable them to participate in their treatment planning, express whether they’re in pain, and allow researchers to explore what other mental abilities they have, Cruse and colleague Adrian Owen said in a telephone interview.
But Owen stressed the technique needs further development before it can be used routinely.
The research was published online Wednesday by the journal Lancet.
In a vegetative state, patients are unconscious and unaware of themselves and others, although their eyes are open and they may react reflexively when startled. Nobody knows how many vegetative patients live in hospitals and centers for rehabilitation or long-term care.
The diagnosis is made with tests of patients’ behavior, such as whether they can follow a moving object with their eyes, follow commands or show even a rudimentary ability to communicate.
The EEG test involved attaching a tight-fitting cap to each patient’s skull with electrodes to monitor brain waves. Patients were told to imagine squeezing their right hand into a fist or wiggling their toes on both feet whenever they heard a tone. Those mental activities were chosen to create a detectable brain wave signal.
Watch the comparison when a healthy patient and one in a vegetative state were asked to squeeze their right hand:
Soon after the instructions were given, tones started sounding several seconds apart, and the EEG machine looked for a response to each one. Each patient was asked to imagine both kinds of movement at different times during the assessment.
The researchers noted that three of 12 healthy volunteers failed to produce a detectable brain wave signal in response to the commands. It’s not clear why, but that shows that if a vegetative patient doesn’t produce such a signal, it doesn’t necessarily indicate a lack of awareness, the researchers said.
The positive EEG results with the three patients do show some degree of self-awareness that indicate they weren’t truly vegetative, Dr. James Bernat wrote in an email. He’s a neurology professor at Dartmouth Medical School and a spokesman for the American Academy of Neurology.
Dr. Joseph Giacino, director of rehabilitation neuropsychology for the Spaulding Rehabilitation Hospital in Boston, who didn’t participate in the research, called the results “a really important first step.” But he said the EEG technique must prove itself in further research before it can be used routinely.
He also said he saw it as a potential addition to current diagnostic tests rather than a replacement.
A positive result could indicate a need to try rehabilitation, or a longer stay at a rehabilitation hospital than the patient might otherwise get, Giacino said. And it could spur doctors to try to find a way to let the patient communicate, he said.
Dr. Paul Matthews, a professor of clinical neurosciences at Imperial College in London, said in a statement that the study leaves some questions unanswered. It’s not clear whether patients who give a positive signal in one testing session will continue to do so later on, he said, nor do scientists know what a positive signal means for likelihood of a substantial recovery.




















Submitting your tip... please wait!
MUSE_FENDERTAMA
Posted on November 11, 2011 at 11:19amI would love to have some form of consciousness when I was in a vegetative state. I could practice my multiplication facts (who is perfect with those, anyway?), study philosophy, try to understand economics better, have a long reflection on my life so I could improve it when I got out, etc.
I think that stuff would be beneficial to me, all things being equal.
Report Post »DavidInStLouis
Posted on November 11, 2011 at 10:59amGreat! Wonderful! JQCITIZEN said it well too! : )
Report Post »piper60
Posted on November 11, 2011 at 9:54amThey need to use these on all the politicians.
Report Post »JimmyP
Posted on November 11, 2011 at 9:31amThank you Canada!
Report Post »JimmyP
Posted on November 11, 2011 at 9:30amOur Lord smiled today!
How soon before these can be attached to a pre-born human fetus?
Perhaps we should call the pre-born “Man-made cell collections”.
Report Post »Mom4Freedom
Posted on November 11, 2011 at 7:39amWOW!! This is a wonderful expanse of technology that has a promise of hope and clarity for individuals who suffer from traumatic brain injury, AND for their families. I thank God for His inspiration and for the persistence of those gifted enough to discover what this could do for people.
Report Post »JQCitizen
Posted on November 11, 2011 at 6:41amIt is nice to see people in the medical community putting such effort into a patient sector that has been devalued by the creeping “Death Cutlture”.
If this knowledge is widely distributed, perhaps over time it has the capacity to “re-humanize” these people much as ultra-sound technology, and neo-natal care is slowly doing for the Unborn.
Imagine if this technology had existed, and been broadly popularized, before the Terry Shiavo fiasco. Her family could have demanded this technology be utilized. She might have even been able to blow the whistle on that Creep of a husband she had.
Knowledge is Power, and Wide-Spread Knowledge is Absolute Power. The Death Culture depends on wide-spread ignorance.
Let’s keep up the fight!!! Let’s spread this story!!!
Report Post »Smokey_Bojangles
Posted on November 10, 2011 at 10:08pmDon’t tell the left.They love pulling the plug to much.
Report Post »jaylew
Posted on November 10, 2011 at 8:49pmWhat is left out of this article is that all the test patients were members of congress or occupants of the White House. Measurable or detectable EEG activity is always rare amongst that sample population.
Report Post »