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Evaluation of Patients in Coma

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Title: Evaluation of Patients in Coma


1
APPROACH TO COMA
2
What well discuss
  • Basic definitions
  • Neuroanatomy of consciousness
  • Key examination points (CNS General)
  • Investigations
  • Coma mimics

3
Importance of this topic
  • Lot of Semantic confusions about the terminology
    related to coma.
  • Work up of the patient with coma is often
    complex and always urgent.
  • Examination determines the early management,
    urgency with which imaging and CSF studies are
    obtained.

4
CONSCIOUSNESS
  • Def Awareness of ones own self and his
    environment
  • and responsiveness to external and internal
    stimuli.
  • Two Dimensions
  • Arousal Primitive function, sense of
    wakefulness (Brainstem, Medial thalamus).
  • Cognition Cerebral cortex, Subcortical nuclei.
  • Cognition depends on arousal, but normal
  • arousal does not guarantee normal cognition.

5
Severity of altered sensorium
  • Alert Confusion
  • Drowsiness Delirium.
  • Stupor
  • Coma

6
Definitions
  • Drowsiness inability to sustain a wakeful state
    without external stimuli. Pt can be easily
    arousable, but falls asleep when left alone.
  • Stupor A state in which the pt can be aroused by
    noxious stimuli only little motor or verbal
    activity once aroused.
  • Coma State of complete loss of consciousness.
    The pt appears to be in deep sleep and not
    arousable at all to any kind of stimuli. He wont
    attempt to avoid painful or noxious stimuli. No
    sleep wake cycle.

7
Definitons.
  • Confusion inability to maintain a coherent
    sequence of thoughts, usually by inattention and
    disorientation
  • Delirium a state of disturbed consciousness
    with motor restlessness and disorientation.
    (Confusion Motor agitation)

8
Really Simple Neuroanatomy
  • Ascending Reticular Activating System (ARAS) in
    the brainstem (Upper pons midbrain).
  • Thalamic nuclei receiving fibers from ARAS and
    sending fibers to Cortex.
  • Cerebral cortex.

9
ARAS
10
(No Transcript)
11
ARAS
  • ARAS acts as a gating system, increasing or
    decreasing thalamic inhibitory influence on the
    cortex.
  • Alters effect of sensory stimuli ascending.
  • Alters descending cortical stimulation.

12
Demands of Arousal
  • Function of ARAS-Thalamic-Cortical system depends
    on
  • anatomic integrity of structures
  • metabolic integrity (circulatory integrity)
  • communicative integrity (neurotransmitter
    function)

13
Coma Basics
  • Coma implies dysfunction of
  • ARAS or
  • Both hemi-cortices
  • Anatomically, this means
  • central brainstem structures (bilaterally) from
    caudal medulla to rostral midbrain
  • both hemispheres

14
Epidemiology of Coma
  • Plum and Posner 1982
  • 500 consecutive cases of coma
  • 326 diffuse or metabolic brain dysfunction (149
    drug intoxication)
  • 101 supratentorial (44/101 ICH)
  • 65 subtentorial lesions
  • (40/65 brainstem infarcts)

15
Etiology (Metabolic)
  • AEIOU TIPS They affect cortex or brainstem or
    both.
  • A- Alcohol, Anoxia, Acidosis
  • E- Electrolytes, enviroment
  • I - Immunity, insulin
  • O-Opiates
  • U- Uremia
  • T- Trauma, toxins
  • I- Infections
  • P- Psychogenic, pharmacologic
  • S- Shock, sepsis

16
Structural causes
Supratentorial 1.Bilateral cerebral
infarct, concussion , contusion,
2.Postical states, hypertensive encephalopathy,
3.Encephalitis, meningitis, Increased ICP,
4.SAH, hemorrhage , tumor , abscess.
17
Structural causes ..
Infratentorial 1. Pontine hemorrhage,
Infarct. 2. Cerebellar hemorrhage , 3.
Basilar artery occlusion , 4. Brainstem
tumors, or traumatic Hge.
18
Coma Patient Evaluation
19
History
  • To seek historical data from friends , family ,
    or others.
  • The rate of onset of neurologic or behavioral
    changes
  • Abrupt onset favors the CNS hemorrhage or
    ischemia ,
  • Gradual onset favors a metabolic problem.
  • The history of trauma or on ongoing medical
    illness,
  • Suicidal ideation , past attempts at self-harm ,
  • History of substance abuse.

20
First Step
  • Assess the ABCs
  • Airway gag reflex,
  • Breathing pattern and sufficiency,
  • Circulation adequacy and hypotension.

21
The roles of vital signs
  • Bradycardia Increased ICP , hypothyroidism,
    intoxication and cardiac disease .
  • Tachycardia Hypovolemia, Infection.
  • Hypertension ICP, ICH, HT encephalopathy, Stroke
    and toxins.
  • Hypotension Sepsis, Hypovolemia, Wernickes
    encephalopathy, MI.
  • Hypothermia sepsis , hypothyroidism , or
    environmental exposure.
  • Hyperthermia sepsis , heat stroke ,
    thyrotoxicosis , stroke , toxins.

22
General examination
  • Look for external injuries.
  • Skin needle tracks, rash.
  • Breath odour fetor hepaticus, uremia, acetone,
    or alcohol.
  • CVS, RS and ABDOMEN.

23
Neurologic Exam
  • Cornerstone of assessment,
  • Descriptive, systematic,
  • Reference point for serial assessment.

24
Components
  • Level of Consciousness
  • Breathing pattern
  • Pupillary size and reaction
  • Extraocular movements
  • Corneal reflex
  • Motor status

25
Breathing
  • Abnormalities of respiration can help localize
    but
  • almost always in the context of other signs.
  • Cheyne-Stokes respiration
  • Cycles of Hyperapnea alternating with apnea.
  • bilateral dysfunction of the hemispheres or
    diencephalon.
  • Apneustic Long inspiratory phase, upper pons
    lesions.
  • Cluster high medulla or lower pons.
  • Ataxic Erratic shallow and deep breathing,
    medulla.
  • Apnea Terminal stage, Medulla.

26
Level of consciousness
  • GCS (Glasgow Coma Scale)
  • Eye Opening (4), Verbal (5), Motor (6)
  • 13-15 Mild, 8-12 Moderate, 3-7 Severe Coma.
  • The AVPU scale
  • A - alert aware
  • V - responds to verbal stimuli
  • P - responds to painful stimuli
  • U - unresponsive

27
Cranial Nerve Exam
  • Systematic assessment of brainstem function via
    reflexes
  • Cranial Nerve Exam
  • Pupillary light response (CN 2-3)
  • Gaze/Oculocephalic/calorics (CN 3,4,6,8)
  • Corneal reflex (CN 5,7)
  • Gag refelx (CN 9,10)

28
Pupillary Light Responses
  • Afferent Limb Optic Nerve.
  • Efferent Limb Parasympathetics via oculomotor.
  • Midbrain integrity/ tectum.
  • Avoid the term PERLA
  • State size, before and after light stimulation,
  • Specify right and left.
  • Be aware of drug effects - Systemic and Local.

29
Pupils Localizing Value
  • Small, Reactive pupils Metabolic coma.
  • Unilateral fixed, dilated pupil uncal
    herniation, PCOM aneurysm.
  • Bilateral, Large fixed pupils Midbrain lesion or
    Death.
  • Bilateral, midposition, fixed pupils
    Transtentorial herniation.
  • Pinpoint pupils Pontine ICH, infarct, Opiate
    poisoning.
  • Horners syndrome- sympathetic dysfunction.

30
PUPILLARY ABNORMALITIES
Normal
Horners syndrome
Left 3rd CN palsy
31
Terminal stage pupil
32
Ciliospinal Reflex
  • 1-2 mm pupillary dilatation evoked by noxious
    cutaneous stimulation.
  • More prominent in sleep or coma than during
    wakefulness.
  • Test integrity of symp.pathways in comatose
    patients.
  • Not particularly useful in evaluating brainstem
    function.

33
Eye Movements
  • Eye movements are the cornerstone of the
    neurologic examinations of the comatose patient ,
    as they closely approximate the ARAS
    anatomatically.
  • EOM evaluates the cortex, and the MLF in the
    brainstem.

34
Eye Movements
  • Note resting position of both eyes
  • Conjugate Deviation suggests frontal / pontine
    damage.
  • Frontal Eyes look toward the side of lesion.
  • Pontine - Eyes look away from the side of
    lesion.
  • Dysconjugance suggests Cranial Nerve abn.
  • Roving eye movts indicate intact brainstem.
  • Ocular bobbing Pontine lesion.

35
Oculocephalic and Calorics
  • Same reflex elicited differently
  • Afferent Eighth nerve
  • Efferent 3,4,6 via MLF and PPRF
  • Oculocephalics may also involve proprioceptive
    afferents from the neck

36
Oculocephalic Reflex (Dolls eye)
  • Brisk horizontal rotation of head with eyes held
    open and watch for contraversive movements of
    eyes.
  • Then flexion of the neck eyes deviate up,
    followed by extension eyes deviate downward
    Vertical gaze.
  • If eyes follow movement of head to side, suspect
    brainstem involvement in coma.
  • Caution with suspected c-spine injury.

37
DOLLS EYE MOVEMENT
38
Caloric test(Oculovestibular reflex)
  • Ensure TM integrity
  • Elevation of head to 30 degrees (so that lateral
    semicircular canal is vertical)
  • Instillation of 50 to 120 ml of ice water
  • Awake pt deviation toward, nystagmus away
  • Comatose deviation toward, no nystagmus.
  • (Brainstem intact, Cortex is damaged)
  • No Deviation, no nystagmus - (Brainstem is
    damaged)

39
Calorics
  • COWS Pneumonic.
  • Wait for 5 minutes and test the other ear.
  • To test vertical eye movements
  • Both ears, cold water-downward gaze
  • Both ears, warm water-upward gaze

40
Caloric test
Normal
Abnormal
41
Corneal Reflex
  • Afferent Trigeminal Nerve
  • Efferent Third Nerve (Bells Phenomenon
  • and Facial Nerve (Eye closure)
  • Tests dorsal midbrain (Bells) and pontine
    integrity (Eye closure)

42
Gag Reflex
  • Afferent Glossopharyngeal
  • Efferent Vagus
  • Taken in context of other findings

43
Motor Exam
  • Assess tone, presence of asterixis
  • Response to painful stimuli
  • none
  • abnormal flexor
  • abnormal extensor
  • normal localization/withdrawal
  • Focal weakness.

44
  • Decorticate posturing in comatose patient
  • Lesion above the red nucleus
  • Lower limbs extend, upper limbs flex following
    stimulus
  • Activity in the brainstem flexor center, the red
    nucleus

45
  • Decerebrate posturing in comatose patient
  • Upper and lower limbs extend following stimulus
  • Lesion between red nucleus and vestibular
    nucleus.
  • Overactivity of Lateral vestibular nucleus.

46
Clinical Value
  • Decorticate posturing indicates a higher level of
    brainstem injury than decerebrate posturing (a
    good thing)
  • Comatose patients who go from decerebrate to
    decorticate (ascending progression of impaired
    area) have a better prognosis than those that go
    from decorticate to decerebrate (descending
    progression of impaired area).
  • Descending impairment will be fatal if medullary
    respiratory and cardiovascular centers are
    damaged.

47
Reflexes
  • Deep tendon
  • Biceps, brachioradialis, triceps
  • Patellar, Achilles
  • Plantar Responses
  • Superficial skin
  • Abdominal, cremasteric
  • Meningeal signs.

48
Goals in Emergency
  • Primary Neurological Process?
  • evidence of raised ICP,
  • focal findings, especially that implicate
    brainstem structures.
  • Secondary Processes?
  • signs of infection, toxic/metabolic processes
  • relative lack of focality.

49
Coma classification after examination
  • Diseases with no focal or lateralizing signs.
  • Diseases with focal brainstem or lateralizing
    cerebral signs.
  • Diseases with meninigitic syndromes.

50
Diseases with no focal or lateralizing signs.
  • Symmetrical examination, small reactive pupil,
    normal eye movements.
  • Predominantly metabolic, toxic or septic
  • Bilateral cerebral hemispheres or brainstem or
    both are affected.

51
Diseases with focal brainstem or lateralizing
cerebral signs.
  • Focal lesion in the brainstem directly affect
    the ARAS.
  • Focal lesion in the cortex leading to herniation
    and indirectly affecting the ARAS.
  • Bilateral cortical lesion can directly cause
    coma.

52
Uncal herniaiton
  • Expanding lesions in lateral middle fossa.
  • Compression of hippocampal gyrus over free edge
    of tentorium.
  • Ipsilateral dilated nonreactive pupil.
  • Ipsilateral hemiparesis due to compression of
    opposite CST by the midbrain (Kernohan waltman
    sign).

53
Uncal herniation
54
Transtentorial herniation
  • Large midline mass
  • Small symmetric pupil or midposition, unreactive
    pupil.
  • Decorticate posturing.
  • Durets hemorrhages in the midbrain.

55
Transtentorial herniation
56
Tonsillar herniation
  • Posterior fossa lesions
  • Herniated tonsils compress the medullary vital
    centers.
  • Decerebrate rigidity, apnea, bradycardia
  • Neck rigidity, opisthotonus.

57
Tonsillar herniation
58
Investigations
  • Blood glucose, urea, electrolytes, ABG etc
  • Non contrast head CT
  • Acute blood
  • Space occupying lesion
  • MRI
  • Posterior fossa
  • Early infarct
  • LP
  • Xanothochromia
  • Infection
  • EEG Non convulsive status epilepticus.

59
Coma Mimics
  • Akinetic mutism
  • Locked-in syndrome
  • Persistent Vegetative state
  • Conversion reactions

60
Akinetic Mutism
  • Silent, immobile but alert appearing
  • Usually due to lesion in bilateral mesial frontal
    lobes, bilateral thalamic lesions or lesions in
    peri-aqueductal grey (brainstem)

61
Persitent Vegetative state
  • No evidence of awareness of self or environment
    and an inability to interact with others
  • Bowel bladder incontinence
  • Hypothalamic brain stem autonomic function
    preservation to permit survival with medical
    nursing care
  • Maintainence of intermittent wakefulness and
    sleep-wake cycles
  • No evidence of language comprehension or
    expression
  • No response to visual,auditory,noxious,or tactile
    stimuli
  • Possible preservation of cranial nerves spinal
    cord reflexes

62
Locked-In Syndrome
  • Infarction of basis pontis (all descending motor
    fibers to body and face)
  • May spare eye-movements
  • Often spares eye-opening
  • EEG is normal or shows alpha activity

63
Conversion reactions
  • Fairly rare
  • Oculocephalics may or may not be present.
  • The presence of nystagmus with cold water
    calorics indicates the patient is physiologically
    awake
  • EEG used to confirm normal activity

64
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