Katana VentraIP

Locked-in syndrome

Locked-in syndrome (LIS), also known as pseudocoma, is a condition in which a patient is aware but cannot move or communicate verbally due to complete paralysis of nearly all voluntary muscles in the body except for vertical eye movements and blinking.[3] The individual is conscious and sufficiently intact cognitively to be able to communicate with eye movements.[4] Electroencephalography results are normal in locked-in syndrome. Total locked-in syndrome, or completely locked-in state (CLIS), is a version of locked-in syndrome wherein the eyes are paralyzed as well.[5] Fred Plum and Jerome B. Posner coined the term for this disorder in 1966.[6][7]

Locked-in syndrome

Cerebromedullospinal disconnection,[1] de-efferented state, pseudocoma,[2] ventral pontine syndrome

Signs and symptoms[edit]

Locked-in syndrome is usually characterized by quadriplegia (loss of limb function) and the inability to speak in otherwise cognitively intact individuals. Those with locked-in syndrome may be able to communicate with others through coded messages by blinking or moving their eyes, which are often not affected by the paralysis. The symptoms are similar to those of sleep paralysis. Patients who have locked-in syndrome are conscious and aware, with no loss of cognitive function. They can sometimes retain proprioception and sensation throughout their bodies. Some patients may have the ability to move certain facial muscles, and most often some or all of the extraocular muscles. Individuals with the syndrome lack coordination between breathing and voice.[8] This prevents them from producing voluntary sounds, though the vocal cords themselves may not be paralysed.[8]

cases – More frequently from a krait bite and other neurotoxic venoms, as they cannot usually cross the blood–brain barrier

Poisoning

Brainstem stroke

Diseases of the

circulatory system

Medication overdose

Damage to nerve cells, particularly destruction of the , caused by disease or osmotic demyelination syndrome (formerly designated central pontine myelinolysis) secondary to excessively rapid correction of hyponatremia [>1 mEq/L/h])[10]

myelin sheath

A stroke or brain hemorrhage, usually of the

basilar artery

Traumatic brain injury

Result from of the brainstem

lesion

Unlike persistent vegetative state, in which the upper portions of the brain are damaged and the lower portions are spared, locked-in syndrome is essentially the opposite, caused by damage to specific portions of the lower brain and brainstem, with no damage to the upper brain. Injuries to the pons are the most common cause of locked-in syndrome.


Possible causes of locked-in syndrome include:


Curare poisoning and paralytic shellfish poisoning mimic a total locked-in syndrome by causing paralysis of all voluntarily controlled skeletal muscles.[11] The respiratory muscles are also paralyzed, but the victim can be kept alive by artificial respiration.

(ALS)

Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis

Bilateral brainstem tumors

(of the whole brain or the brainstem or other part)

Brain death

(deep or irreversible)

Coma

Guillain–Barré syndrome

Myasthenia gravis

Poliomyelitis

Polyneuritis

(chronic or otherwise)

Vegetative state

Treatment[edit]

Neither a standard treatment nor a cure is available. Stimulation of muscle reflexes with electrodes (NMES) has been known to help patients regain some muscle function. Other courses of treatment are often symptomatic.[14] Assistive computer interface technologies such as Dasher, combined with eye tracking, may be used to help people with LIS communicate with their environment.

Prognosis[edit]

It is extremely rare for any significant motor function to return, with the majority of locked-in syndrome patients never regaining motor control. However, some people with the condition continue to live for extended periods of time,[15][16] while in exceptional cases, like that of Kerry Pink,[17] Gareth Shepherd,[18] Jacob Haendel,[19] Kate Allatt,[20] and Jessica Wegbrans,[21] a near-full recovery may be achieved with intensive physical therapy.

Research[edit]

New brain–computer interfaces (BCIs) may provide future remedies. One effort in 2002 allowed a fully locked-in patient to answer yes-or-no questions.[22][23] In 2006, researchers created and successfully tested a neural interface which allowed someone with locked-in syndrome to operate a web browser.[24] Some scientists have reported that they have developed a technique that allows locked-in patients to communicate via sniffing.[25] For the first time in 2020, a 34-year-old German patient, paralyzed since 2015 (later also the eyeballs) managed to communicate through an implant capable of reading brain activity.[26]

Akinetic mutism

List of people with locked-in syndrome

: memoirs of journalist Jean-Dominique Bauby about his life with the condition

The Diving Bell and the Butterfly

, novel about a soldier who loses his limbs and senses after being wounded fighting in WWI

Johnny Got His Gun

song interpretation of Johnny Got His Gun

One (Metallica song)

Piotr Kniecicki (2014). An Art of Graceful Dying. Lukasz Swiderski  978-0-9928486-0-6 (Autobiography, written with residual wrist movements and specially adapted computer)

ISBN