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Circadian Rhythmicity During Coma Awakening
Sponsor: Hospices Civils de Lyon
Summary
Acute brain injury is a major cause of admission to intensive care units, as well as of mortality and morbidity, worldwide and for all age groups. With most patients surviving these injuries thanks to recent medical advances, society is facing not only the growing burden of disability, but above all the ethical issues involved in withdrawal of life-sustaining therapies (WSLT). To resolve this dilemma, effective treatment would be necessary, but this is hampered by our limited knowledge of the pathophysiological mechanisms of the natural history of coma, from onset to recovery. A more systematic description of coma awakening using a multimodal battery in intensive care unit patients would enable us to refine the awakening and re-emergence of consciousness and define appropriate biomarkers for selecting candidates in interventional studies. The investigators hypothesize that the current postulate of successive stages (i.e. from one clinical class to the next) of coma recovery is incomplete, as it does not take into account the rhythmic nature of wakefulness. The investigators propose that the best correlate of the natural history of coma recovery is a gradual shift from the loss of physiological cycles to a circadian rhythmicity of arousal indices (behavioural and neurophysiological) and a wide amplitude of metric fluctuations in assessing content richness.
Key Details
Gender
All
Age Range
17 Years - Any
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Enrollment
90
Start Date
2024-12-02
Completion Date
2028-12-02
Last Updated
2026-02-06
Healthy Volunteers
No
Conditions
Interventions
Repeated behavioural assessment
One CRS-R per visit * 4 SECONDs * Eye tracking during every clinical assessment * Recording every 2-4h of the Glasgow Coma Score * Recording every 2h of the temperature and pupillometer reactivity to light
Act-Pass paradigm
Before and after sedation withdrawal Assessment of infra-clinical response to an active paradigm (attention focalisation or diversion).
Biological measures of circadian and monoamines biomarkers
Systematic urinary sampling every 2 hours for melatonin, cortisol and monoamines metabolites
Transcriptomic and genomic analysis
Definition of the peripheral cellular clock by 2 transcriptomic measures Constitution of a genomic biobank to analyse the cofounding factors for circadian disruption and differential clinical recovery
Polysomnography with concomitant environment recording
One 48h polysomnography for the first visit \+ 3\* 24h polysomnography for each visit Synchronised recordings of light, sound, activity in patients' rooms
Actimetry
Continuous recording of movements at the wrist during 7 days after sedation withdrawal
Morphological MRI
Precise description of brain lesion by a 3T MRI within the 1st week after sedation withdrawal
Assessment of correlation between patients' behaviour and neurophysiological markers of consciousness.
Video recording of spontaneous patients' movements in the bed and synchronized during 2h with high-density EEG.
Locations (1)
Service de Réanimation Polyvalente Neurologique Hôpital Neurologique Pierre Wertheimer
Bron, Lyon, France