Owing to difficulties in measuring ventilation symmetry, good evidence of different right/left respiratory movements has not yet been provided. We investigated VT differences between paretic and healthy sides during quiet breathing, voluntary hyperventilation, and hypercapnic stimulation in patients with hemiparesis. We studied eight patients with hemiparesis and nine normal sex- and age-matched subjects. Right- and left-sided VT was reconstructed using optoelectronic plethysmography. In control subjects, no asymmetry was found in the study conditions. VTs of paretic and healthy sides were similar during quiet breathing, but paretic VT was lower during voluntary hyperventilation in six patients and higher during hypercapnic stimulation in eight patients (p = 0.02). The ventilatory response to hypercapnic stimulation was higher on the paretic than on the healthy side (p = 0.012). In conclusion, hemiparetic stroke produces asymmetric ventilation with an increase in carbon dioxide sensitivity and a decrease in voluntary ventilation on the paretic side.
Cerebral fat embolism (CFE) is an uncommon incomplete type of fat embolism syndrome (FES), characterized by purely cerebral involvement. It usually occurs 12–72 hours after the initial trigger, mainly represented by closed, long-bone multiple fractures of the lower extremities. Neurological manifestations are mainly characterized by headache, confusion, seizures, focal deficit, and alteration of the consciousness state up to coma onset. It represents a diagnostic challenge, above all when secondary to uncommon nontraumatic causes, because neurological signs and symptoms are variable and nonspecific, not satisfying the Gurd and Wilson’s criteria, the diagnostic features most widely used today for FES diagnosis. Neuroimaging (mainly MRI, but in some cases, brain computed tomography too) can hasten the diagnosis, avoiding other unnecessary investigations and treatment. Usually self-limiting, CFE may sometimes be fatal. Treatment is to date mainly supportive and prophylactic strategies are considered an important tool to decrease the development of fat embolism and, consequently, the rate of CFE.
Objective.This international multi-center, prospective, observational study aimed at identifying predictors of short-term clinical outcome in patients with prolonged Disorders of Consciousness (DoC) due to acquired severe brain injury.Methods.Patients in vegetative state/unresponsive wakefulness syndrome (VS/UWS) or in minimally conscious state (MCS) were enrolled within 3 months from their brain injury in 12 specialized medical institutions. Demographic, anamnestic, clinical and neurophysiological data were collected at study entry. Patients were then followed-up for assessing the primary outcome, i.e. clinical diagnosis according to standardized criteria at 6 months post-injury.Results.We enrolled 147 patients (44 women; mean age: 49.4 [95% confidence intervals: 46.1-52.6] years; VS/UWS= 71, MCS= 76; traumatic= 55, vascular= 56, anoxic= 36; mean time post-injury= 59.6 [55.4-63.6] days). The 6-month follow-up was complete for 143 patients (VS/UWS= 70; MCS= 73). With respect to study entry, the clinical diagnosis improved in 72 patients (VS/UWS= 27; MCS= 45). Younger age, shorter time post-injury, higher Coma Recovery Scale-Revised total score and presence of EEG reactivity to eye opening at study entry predicted better outcome, whereas etiology, clinical diagnosis, Disability Rating Scale score, EEG background activity, acoustic reactivity and P300 on event related potentials were not associated with outcome.Conclusions.Multimodal assessment could identify patients with higher likelihood of clinical improvement in order to help clinicians, families and funding sources with various aspects of decision-making. This multi-center, international study aims to stimulate further research that drives international consensus regarding standardization of prognostic procedures for patients with DoC.
Motor evoked potentials could be a supportive tool to increase the prognostic accuracy of upper limb motor and functional outcome in hemiparetic patients, especially those with severe initial paresis (MRC < 2) and/or with motor evoked potentials absent in the post-stroke acute phase.
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