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Cognitive function in the locked-in syndrome

Authors :
Caroline Schnakers
Steve Majerus
Serge Goldman
Melanie Boly
Philippe Eeckhout
Stephane Gay
Frederic Pellas
Valerie Bartsch
Philippe Peigneux
Gustave Moonen
Steven Laureys
Source :
Journal of neurology. 255(3)
Publication Year :
2006

Abstract

The lockedin syndrome (LIS) originates from a ventro-pontine lesion resulting in a complete quadraplegia and anarthria. Classically, communication remains possible by means of spared vertical eye movements and/or blinking. To allow assessing cognitive functions in LIS patients, we propose here a neuropsychological testing based on eye-coded communication. Ten chronic LIS survivors were assessed 1 to 6 years after their brain insult.One patient was evaluated subacutely (at 2 months) and retested at 6 and 16 months.Neuropsychological testing encompassed short- and long-term memory, attention, executive functioning, phonological and semantic processing and verbal intelligence. None of the patients showed alterations in verbal intelligence. Impairments in one or several tests were found in five patients. In three of these patients, neuropsychological deficits could be related to additional cortical or thalamic structural brain lesions. In the other 2 patients, weakness or signs of fatigue only were observed in one or two cognitive tasks. Repeated measures in a subacute patient with pure brainstem lesion indicate the recovery of good levels of cognition 6 months after injury. Results indicate that LIS patients can recover intact cognitive levels in cases of pure brainstem lesions, and that additional brain injuries are most likely responsible for associated cognitive deficits in the LIS. Furthermore, a systematic neuropsychological assessment in LIS patients would allow detecting their cognitive deficits,which will contribute to improve their quality of life and of communication with family and medical caretakers.

Details

ISSN :
03405354
Volume :
255
Issue :
3
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of neurology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....5d64c2a2765dacb4661920243abb5c26