consciousness Flashcards

coma: identify causes of metabolic and non-metabolic coma, and explain the differences between brain death, coma and persistent vegetative state

1
Q

3 disorders of consciousness

A

coma, vegetative state, mimimally conscious state

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2
Q

define coma

A

state if unrousable unresponsiveness, lasting more than 6 hours, where person can’t be awakened, respond normally to painful stimuli, light and sound, lacks normal sleep-wake cycle, and doesn’t initiate voluntary actions

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3
Q

define vegetative state

A

state of wakefulness without awareness in which there’s preserved capacity for spontaneous or stimulus-induced arousal, evidenced by sleep-wake cycles and range of reflexive and spontaneous behaviours

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4
Q

what is vegetative state characterised by

A

complete absence of behavioural evidence for self or environmental awareness

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5
Q

define minimally conscious state

A

state of severely altered consciousness in which minimal but clearly discernible behavioural evidence of self or environmental awareness is demonstrated

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6
Q

what is minimally conscious state characterised by

A

inconsistent but reproducible responses above level of spontaneous or reflexive behaviour, indicating some degree of interaction with surroundings

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7
Q

what is damaged in vegetitive state

A

cortex and hemispheres

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8
Q

what is damaged in brainstem death

A

brainstem

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9
Q

4 causes of coma

A

metabolic, diffuse intracranial, hemisphere lesion, brain stem

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10
Q

2 causes of coma

A

metabolic, diffuse intracranial

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11
Q

6 causes of diffuse intracranial comas

A

head injury, meningitis, subarachnoid haemorrhage, encephalitis, epilepsy, hypoxic brain injury

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12
Q

6 causes of diffuse intracranial comas

A

head injury, meningitis, subarachnoid haemorrhage, encephalitis, epilepsy, hypoxic brain injury

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13
Q

4 causes of hemisphere lesion comas

A

cerebral infarct, cerebral haemorrhage (subdural or extradural; more likely to be haemorrhagic stroke), abscess, tumour

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14
Q

5 causes of brainstem comas

A

brainstem infarct, tumour, abscess, cerebellar haemorrhage, cerebellar infarct

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15
Q

MRI of extradural haemorrhage and lucid interval

A

elipitical bleed; lucid interval: struck on side of head -> initial loss of consciousness (concussion) -> damage artery -> wake up as bleeding into brain -> lose consciousness again due to high intracranial pressure

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16
Q

what is diffuse axonal injury, and example of location

A

disorder of white matter tracts e.g. corpus callosum