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Acute traumatic coma awakening by right median nerve electrical stimulation : a randomised controlled trial

Authors :
Wu, Xiang
Xie, Li
Lei, Jin
Yao, Jiemin
Li, Jiarong
Ruan, Lixin
Hong, Jun
Zheng, Guodong
Cheng, Yangyu
Long, Liansheng
Wang, Jiancun
Huang, Chuanping
Xie, Qiuyou
Zhang, Xuelei
He, Jianghong
Yu, Xuebin
Lv, Shouhua
Sun, Zhaosheng
Liu, Dai
Li, Xin
Zhu, Jianxin
Yang, Xiaoliang
Wang, Dongdong
Bao, Yijun
Maas, Andrew I.R.
Menon, David
Xue, Yajun
Jiang, Jiyao
Feng, Junfeng
Gao, Guoyi
ACES Participants
Source :
Intensive care medicine
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

PurposeSevere traumatic brain injury (TBI) leads to acute coma and may result in prolonged disorder of consciousness (pDOC). We aimed to determine whether right median nerve electrical stimulation is a safe and effective treatment for accelerating emergence from coma after TBI.MethodsThis randomised controlled trial was performed in 22 centres in China. Participants with acute coma at 7-14 days after TBI were randomly assigned (1:1) to either routine therapy and right median nerve electrical stimulation (RMNS group) or routine treatment (control group). The RMNS group received 20 mA, 300 mu s, 40 Hz stimulation pulses, lasting 20 s per minutes, 8 h per day, for 2 weeks. The primary outcome was the proportion of patients who regained consciousness 6 months post-injury. The secondary endpoints were Glasgow Coma Scale (GCS), Full Outline of Unresponsiveness scale (FOUR), Coma Recovery Scale-Revised (CRS-R), Disability Rating Scale (DRS) and Glasgow Outcome Scale Extended (GOSE) scores reported as medians on day 28, 3 months and 6 months after injury, and GCS and FOUR scores on day 1 and day 7 during stimulation. Primary analyses were based on the intention-to-treat set.ResultsBetween March 26, 2016, and October 18, 2020, 329 participants were recruited, of whom 167 were randomised to the RMNS group and 162 to the control group. At 6 months post-injury, a higher proportion of patients in the RMNS group regained consciousness compared with the control group (72.5%, n = 121, 95% confidence interval (CI) 65.2-78.7% vs. 56.8%, n = 92, 95% CI 49.1-64.2%, p = 0.004). GOSE at 3 months and 6 months (5 [interquartile range (IQR) 3-7] vs. 4 [IQR 2-6], p = 0.002; 6 [IQR 3-7] vs. 4 [IQR 2-7], p = 0.0005) and FOUR at 28 days (15 [IQR 13-16] vs. 13 [interquartile range (IQR) 11-16], p = 0.002) were significantly increased in the RMNS group compared with the control group. Trajectory analysis showed that significantly more patients in the RMNS group had faster GCS, CRS-R and DRS improvement (p = 0.01, 0.004 and 0.04, respectively). Adverse events were similar in both groups. No serious adverse events were associated with the stimulation device.ConclusionRight median nerve electrical stimulation is a possible effective treatment for patients with acute traumatic coma, that will require validation in a confirmatory trial.

Subjects

Subjects :
Human medicine

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
03424642
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Intensive care medicine
Accession number :
edsair.od......2097..152e88cc27f63a6994475fa0597dd022