Sleep Medicine Reviews
Volume 14, Issue 2 , Pages 97-105, April 2010

Sleep in disorders of consciousness

  • Victor Cologan

      Affiliations

    • Coma Science Group, Cyclotron Research Center, University of Liège, Belgium
    • Tel.: +32 4 366 23 62; fax: +32 4 366 29 46.
  • ,
  • Manvel Schabus

      Affiliations

    • Coma Science Group, Cyclotron Research Center, University of Liège, Belgium
    • Division of Physiological Psychology, University of Salzburg, Austria
    • Tel.: +43 662 8044 5143; fax: +43 662 8044 5126.
  • ,
  • Didier Ledoux

      Affiliations

    • Department of Intensive Care Medicine, Sart Tilman University Hospital, Liège, Belgium
    • Tel.: +32 4 366 74 95; fax: +32 4 366 88 98.
  • ,
  • Gustave Moonen

      Affiliations

    • Department of Neurology, Sart Tilman University Hospital, Liège, Belgium
    • Tel.: +32 4 366 72 55; fax: +32 4 366 74 99.
  • ,
  • Pierre Maquet

      Affiliations

    • Coma Science Group, Cyclotron Research Center, University of Liège, Belgium
    • Department of Neurology, Sart Tilman University Hospital, Liège, Belgium
    • Tel.: +32 4 366 23 67; fax: +32 4 366 29 46.
  • ,
  • Steven Laureys

      Affiliations

    • Coma Science Group, Cyclotron Research Center, University of Liège, Belgium
    • Department of Neurology, Sart Tilman University Hospital, Liège, Belgium
    • Corresponding Author InformationCorrespondence to: Coma Science Group Cyclotron Research Center, Sart Tilman B-30, 4000 Liege, Belgium. Tel.: +32 4 366 23 04; fax: +32 4 366 29 46.

Summary 

From a behavioral as well as neurobiological point of view, sleep and consciousness are intimately connected. A better understanding of sleep cycles and sleep architecture of patients suffering from disorders of consciousness (DOC) might therefore improve the clinical care for these patients as well as our understanding of the neural correlations of consciousness. Defining sleep in severely brain-injured patients is however problematic as both their electrophysiological and sleep patterns differ in many ways from healthy individuals. This paper discusses the concepts involved in the study of sleep of patients suffering from DOC and critically assesses the applicability of standard sleep criteria in these patients. The available literature on comatose and vegetative states as well as that on locked-in and related states following traumatic or non-traumatic severe brain injury will be reviewed. A wide spectrum of sleep disturbances ranging from almost normal patterns to severe loss and architecture disorganization are reported in cases of DOC and some patterns correlate with diagnosis and prognosis. At the present time the interactions of sleep and consciousness in brain-injured patients are a little studied subject but, the authors suggest, a potentially very interesting field of research.

Keywords: Consciousness, Coma, Vegetative state, Minimally conscious state, Locked-in syndrome, Brain injury, Sleep, Arousal, Polysomnography

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PII: S1087-0792(09)00042-2

doi:10.1016/j.smrv.2009.04.003

Sleep Medicine Reviews
Volume 14, Issue 2 , Pages 97-105, April 2010