21 research outputs found

    Thalamo-frontal connectivity mediates top-down cognitive functions in disorders of consciousness

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    Objective: We employed functional MRI (fMRI) to assess whether (1) patients with disorders of consciousness (DOC) retain the ability to willfully engage in top-down processing and (2) what neurophysiologic factors distinguish patients who can demonstrate this ability from patients who cannot. Methods: Sixteen volunteers, 8 patients in vegetative state (VS), 16 minimally conscious patients (MCS), and 4 exit from MCS (eMCS) patients were enrolled in a prospective cross-sectional fMRI study. Participants performed a target detection task in which they counted the number of times a (changing) target word was presented amidst a set of distractors. Results: Three of 8 patients diagnosed as being in a VS exhibited significant activations in response to the task, thereby demonstrating a state of consciousness. Differential activations across tasks were also observed in 6 MCS patients and 1 eMCS patient. A psycho-physiologic interaction analysis revealed that the main factor distinguishing patients who responded to the task from those who did not was a greater connectivity between the anterior section of thalamus and prefrontal cortex. Conclusions: In our sample of patients, the dissociation between overt behavior observable in clinical assessments and residual cognitive faculties is prevalent among DOC patients (37%). A substantial number of patients, including some diagnosed with VS, can demonstrate willful engagement in top-down cognition. While neuroimaging data are not the same as observable behavior, this suggests that the mental status of some VS patients exceeds what can be appreciated clinically. Furthermore, thalamo-frontal circuits might be crucial to sustaining top-down functions

    A hierarchy of event-related potential markers of auditory processing in disorders of consciousness.

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    Functional neuroimaging of covert perceptual and cognitive processes can inform the diagnoses and prognoses of patients with disorders of consciousness, such as the vegetative and minimally conscious states (VS;MCS). Here we report an event-related potential (ERP) paradigm for detecting a hierarchy of auditory processes in a group of healthy individuals and patients with disorders of consciousness. Simple cortical responses to sounds were observed in all 16 patients; 7/16 (44%) patients exhibited markers of the differential processing of speech and noise; and 1 patient produced evidence of the semantic processing of speech (i.e. the N400 effect). In several patients, the level of auditory processing that was evident from ERPs was higher than the abilities that were evident from behavioural assessment, indicating a greater sensitivity of ERPs in some cases. However, there were no differences in auditory processing between VS and MCS patient groups, indicating a lack of diagnostic specificity for this paradigm. Reliably detecting semantic processing by means of the N400 effect in passively listening single-subjects is a challenge. Multiple assessment methods are needed in order to fully characterise the abilities of patients with disorders of consciousness

    Spectral signatures of reorganised brain networks in disorders of consciousness.

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    Theoretical advances in the science of consciousness have proposed that it is concomitant with balanced cortical integration and differentiation, enabled by efficient networks of information transfer across multiple scales. Here, we apply graph theory to compare key signatures of such networks in high-density electroencephalographic data from 32 patients with chronic disorders of consciousness, against normative data from healthy controls. Based on connectivity within canonical frequency bands, we found that patient networks had reduced local and global efficiency, and fewer hubs in the alpha band. We devised a novel topographical metric, termed modular span, which showed that the alpha network modules in patients were also spatially circumscribed, lacking the structured long-distance interactions commonly observed in the healthy controls. Importantly however, these differences between graph-theoretic metrics were partially reversed in delta and theta band networks, which were also significantly more similar to each other in patients than controls. Going further, we found that metrics of alpha network efficiency also correlated with the degree of behavioural awareness. Intriguingly, some patients in behaviourally unresponsive vegetative states who demonstrated evidence of covert awareness with functional neuroimaging stood out from this trend: they had alpha networks that were remarkably well preserved and similar to those observed in the controls. Taken together, our findings inform current understanding of disorders of consciousness by highlighting the distinctive brain networks that characterise them. In the significant minority of vegetative patients who follow commands in neuroimaging tests, they point to putative network mechanisms that could support cognitive function and consciousness despite profound behavioural impairment.This work was supported by grants from the Wellcome Trust [WT093811MA to T.B.]; the James S. McDonnell Foundation [to A.M.O. and J.D.P.]; the UK Medical Research Council [U.1055.01.002.00001.01 to A.M.O. and J.D.P.]; the Canada Excellence Research Chairs program [to A.M.O.]; the National Institute for Health Research Cambridge Biomedical Research Centre [to J.D.P.]; and the National Institute for Health Research Senior Investigator and Healthcare Technology Cooperative awards [to J.D.P.].This is the final version of the article. It first appeared from PLOS via http://dx.doi.org

    A Comparative Content Analysis of the Daily Nation and the Standard Newspapers’ Coverage of the Covid-19 Pandemic in Kenya

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    On March 11, 2020, WHO declared Covid-19 a pandemic. By April 2020, Covid-19 had spread worldwide interrupting lives almost entirely, straining healthcare systems, and causing many human deaths. To control the spread of Covid-19 the mainstream mass media played a historic role of information sharing and sensitization.  This research is a comparative content analysis of the coverage of Covid-19 by Daily Nation and the Standard newspapers in Kenya. The main objectives of the study were to examine how both newspapers covered the Covid-9 outbreak and to examine the kind of frames the two newspapers used to set their agenda. Both Framing and Agenda-setting theories were used. Via content analysis method, 180 newspapers editions published between March 13 ,2020 and June 10, 2020 were analyzed. The study found that the coverage of the Covid-19 pandemic in both newspapers was loaded with neutral frames (42.8%) mainly around adherence to public health measures as directed by the government. Another finding was that 1 in 10 stories about Covid-19 in Daily Nation and the Standard newspapers were published on pages 1,2 and 3 meaning that the Covid-19 pandemic was a major theme for mass media agenda. The study concludes that the two newspapers played a significant role in controlling the spread of Covid-19 through agenda-setting and framing of stories. It is recommended that the use of positive frames should be encouraged in the practice of communication by the mass media. Key words: Comparative media study, Covid-19, Agenda setting, Media framing DOI: 10.7176/NMMC/106-03 Publication date: March 31st 2024

    Data for Recent sequence variation in probe binding site affected detection of respiratory syncytial virus group B by real-time RT-PCR

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    Background Direct immuno-fluorescence test (IFAT) and multiplex real-time RT-PCR have been central to RSV diagnosis in Kilifi, Kenya. Recently, these two methods showed discrepancies with an increasing number of PCR undetectable RSV-B viruses. Objectives Establish if mismatches in the primer and probe binding sites could have reduced real-time RT-PCR sensitivity. Study design Nucleoprotein (N) and glycoprotein (G) genes were sequenced for real-time RT-PCR positive and negative samples. Primer and probe binding regions in N gene were checked for mismatches and phylogenetic analyses done to determine molecular epidemiology of these viruses. New primers and probe were designed and tested on the previously real-time RT-PCR negative samples. Results N gene sequences revealed 3 different mismatches in the probe target site of PCR negative, IFAT positive viruses. The primers target sites had no mismatches. Phylogenetic analysis of N and G genes showed that real-time RT-PCR positive and negative samples fell into distinct clades. Newly designed primers-probe pair improved detection and recovered previous PCR undetectable viruses. Conclusions An emerging RSV-B variant is undetectable by a quite widely used real-time RT-PCR assay due to polymorphisms that influence probe hybridization affecting PCR accuracy

    Data for Surveillance of respiratory viruses among children attending a primary school in rural coastal Kenya

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    This dataset is acquired from the SPREDstudy which is part of a larger project titled SPReD (Studies of the Pathways of transmission of Respiratory virus Disease) which aims to advance understanding of the nature of spread of respiratory viruses. The study was conducted as a one-year surveillance of respiratory viruses in a rural primary school in Kilifi county, coastal Kenya with the main aim of characterising respiratory virus infection in the school setting and define the role of school-going children in the transmission of these viruses in the general community. The main dataset contains 36 variables and 3384 observations. These data include records of anthropometric measures, acute respiratory infection (ARI) symptoms and laboratory test results from nasal samples obtained from symptomatic school children every week over one school year. Anthropometric measures including the age, grade, weight, height, mid-upper arm circumference, temperature and respiratory rate of each student were recorded every week from a random sample of symptomatic students in each grade. Acute respiratory infection symptoms were also recorded at this time. Nasal samples were screened for 15 virus targets using real-time PCR. Samples were considered positive for a specific target if the ct value was >0 and <=35. The dataset is used to describe the types of respiratory viruses circulating among school-going children
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