Site icon Diseases Treatments Dictionary

Apallic syndrome – Causes, Diagnosis, and Prognosis.

Introduction

Apallic syndrome (AS) also called Unresponsive Wakefulness Syndrome (UWS) and Persistant Vegetative State. It is a result of a traumatic brain injury such as diffuse, bilateral cerebral cortical degeneration and anoxia, or encephalitis which causes the brain to halt the ability to create thoughts, experience sensation, and remember past events.

Patients in a vegetative state are awake, but show no signs of awareness. They may be able to open their eyes, have basic reflexes to actions, and wake up or fall asleep at various intervals. UWS patients are also able to breathe without mechanical assistance, while maintaining a regular heartbeat.

The amount of communication and cognitive mechanisms is limited with UWS. Patients might be able to swallow, grunt, smile, or moan without any external stimulus. They are also unable to obey verbal commands. Below figure shows the states of UWS.

 

Stages of AS

History

The syndrome was first described in 1940 by Ernst Kretschmer who called it Apallic Syndrome. The term persistent vegetative state was coined in 1972 by Scottish spinal surgeon Bryan Jennett and American neurologist Fred Plum to describe a syndrome that seemed to have been made possible by medicine’s increased capacities to keep patients’ bodies alive.

Epidemiology

The overall incidence of new AS/VS full stage cases all etiology is 0.5–2/100.000 population per year. About one third are traumatic and two thirds non traumatic cases. For Europe prevalence of AS in hospital cases is reported to be 0.5–2/100.000 population/ year, about one quarter to one-third secondary to acute traumatic and roughly 70% following acute non-traumatic brain damage and chronic neurological diseases.

Risk factors of apallic syndrome

Signs and symptoms

Causes of apallic syndrome

There are three main causes of PVS (persistent vegetative state):

Medical books (such as Lippincott, Williams, and Wilkins. (2007). In a Page: Pediatric Signs and Symptoms) describe several potential causes of PVS, which are as follows:

Diagnosis and testing

Use of functional neuroimaging studies to study implicit cognitive processing in patients with a clinical diagnosis of persistent vegetative state includes the following techniques:

Treatment of apallic syndrome

Treatment can’t ensure recovery from a state of impaired consciousness, however supportive treatment is used to give the best chance of natural improvement. This can involve:

Sensory stimulation:

Pharmacological therapy mainly uses activating substances such as tricyclic antidepressants or methylphenidate. Mixed results have been reported using dopaminergic drugs such as amantadine and bromocriptine and stimulants such as dextroamphetamine. Surgical methods such as deep brain stimulation are used less frequently due to the invasiveness of the procedures.

Prevention of apallic syndrome

Helmet use may reduce risk of head injury in various risk activists such as follows

Prognosis of apallic syndrome

Exit mobile version