Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
8958069 | Archives of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation | 2018 | 11 Pages |
Abstract
Clinicians should identify and treat confounding conditions, optimize arousal, and perform serial standardized assessments to improve diagnostic accuracy in adults and children with prolonged DoC (Level B). Clinicians should counsel families that for adults, MCS (vs vegetative state [VS]/ unresponsive wakefulness syndrome [UWS]) and traumatic (vs nontraumatic) etiology are associated with more favorable outcomes (Level B). When prognosis is poor, long-term care must be discussed (Level A), acknowledging that prognosis is not universally poor (Level B). Structural MRI, SPECT, and the Coma Recovery Scale-Revised can assist prognostication in adults (Level B); no tests are shown to improve prognostic accuracy in children. Pain always should be assessed and treated (Level B) and evidence supporting treatment approaches discussed (Level B). Clinicians should prescribe amantadine (100-200 mg bid) for adults with traumatic VS/UWS or MCS (4-16 weeks post injury) to hasten functional recovery and reduce disability early in recovery (Level B). Family counseling concerning children should acknowledge that natural history of recovery, prognosis, and treatment are not established (Level B). Recent evidence indicates that the term chronic VS/UWS should replace permanent VS, with duration specified (Level B). Additional recommendations are included.
Keywords
DOCComa Recovery Scale–RevisedACRMTBICRS-RfluorodeoxyglucoseUWSFDGMCsDRSAANTraumatic brain injuryAmerican Academy of Neurologydisorders of consciousnessVegetative stateMinimally conscious stateUnresponsive wakefulness syndromeconfidence intervalDisability Rating ScaleAmerican Congress of Rehabilitation Medicine
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Authors
Joseph T. PhD, Douglas I. MD, Nicholas D. MD, John MD, PhD, Eric J. MD, Stephen MD, Richard MD, PhD, Flora M. MD, Steven MD, PhD, Geoffrey S.F. MD, Risa PhD, Ronald T. PhD, Stuart MD, Thomas S.D. Getchius, Gary S. MD, Melissa J. MD, MSc,