持续植物状态
医学
最小意识状态
随机对照试验
康复
彗差(光学)
心理干预
神经康复
意识障碍
指南
物理医学与康复
重症监护医学
临床试验
物理疗法
意识
精神科
心理学
外科
内科学
神经科学
物理
病理
光学
作者
Andreas Bender,Bernd Eifert,Ilona Rubi‐Fessen,Ralf J. Jox,Petra Maurer-Karattup,Friedemann Müller
出处
期刊:Deutsches Arzteblatt International
[Deutscher Arzte-Verlag GmbH]
日期:2023-09-15
被引量:6
标识
DOI:10.3238/arztebl.m2023.0159
摘要
Severe quantitative disorders of consciousness (DoC) due to acute brain injury affect up to 47% of patients upon admission to intensive care and early rehabilitation units. Nevertheless, the rehabilitation of this vulnerable group of patients has not yet been addressed in any German-language guidelines and has only been studied in a small number of randomized clinical trials.In an S3 clinical practice guideline project, a systematic literature search was carried out for interventions that could improve consciousness in patients with coma, unresponsive wakefulness syndrome, or minimally conscious state after acute brain injury, and an evidence-based evaluation of these interventions was performed. Recommendations concerning diagnostic methods and medical ethics were issued by consensus.Misdiagnoses are common in patients with DoC, with minimal consciousness often going unrecognized. Patients with DoC should, therefore, be repeatedly assessed with standardized instruments, particularly the Coma Recovery Scale-Revised. The literature search yielded 54 clinical trials, mostly of low quality; there were two randomized controlled clinical trials providing level 1 evidence. The best available evidence for the improvement of impaired consciousness is for the administration of amantadine (4 studies) and for anodal transcranial direct-current stimulation of the left dorsolateral prefrontal cortex in patients in the minimal conscious state (8 studies, 2 systematic reviews). Further important components of rehabilitation include positioning methods and sensory stimulation techniques such as music therapy.For the first time, evidence-based German-language clinical practice guidelines have now become available for the neurological rehabilitation of patients with DoC.
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