The Scotsman

Stimulator prompts man in vegetative state to show signs of life

- By HELEN WILLIAM

A 35-year-old man who had been in a vegetative state for 15 years is showing signs of consciousn­ess after receiving a pioneering treatment based on nerve stimulatio­n.

In the month since a vagus nerve stimulator was put into his chest, the man, who was injured in a car accident, has begun responding to simple orders that had been impossible before.

The findings reported in Current Biology may help to show that by stimulatin­g the vagus nerve “it is possible to improve a patient’s presence in the world”, according to lead researcher Angela Sirigu of Institut des Sciences Cognitives Marc Jeannerod in Lyon, France.

The researcher­s said it may challenge the view that a vegetative state which lasts for more than 12 months is irreversib­le.

Other scientists have hailed it as “a potentiall­y very exciting finding” but have also urged caution.

After treatment, it was reported the patient could follow an object with his eyes, turn his head on request and his mother said there was an improved ability to stay awake when listening to his therapist reading a book.

The vagus nerve connects the brain to many other parts of the body, including the gut. It is known to be important in waking, alertness, and many other essential functions.

The patient, who was chosen because he had been in a vegetative state for more than a decade with no sign of improvemen­t, also appeared to react to a “threat”.

Researcher­s spotted that he reacted with surprise by opening his eyes wide when the examiner’s head suddenly approached his face.

Changes in brain activity may show that he had shifted from being in a vegetative state to being a state of minimal consciousn­ess.

An important signal in distinguis­hing between these conditions increased significan­tly in areas of the brain involved in movement, sensation, and awareness, according to the scientists.

Gains were also spotted in the brain’s functional connectivi­ty, metabolic activity in both cortical and subcortica­l regions of the brain.

The researcher­s are now planning a large collaborat­ive study. Dr Tom Manly of Cambridge University’s MRC Cognition and Brain Sciences Unit, described it as a “potentiall­y very exciting finding”.

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