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A thalamic perspective of (un)consciousness in pharmacological and pathological states in humans

Szocs, D.; Lyu, D.; Luppi, A. I.; Coppola, P.; Woodrow, R.; Williams, G. B.; Allanson, J.; Pickard, J. D.; Owen, A. M.; Naci, L.; Menon, D. K.; Stamatakis, E. A.

2024-05-31 neuroscience
10.1101/2024.05.30.596600 bioRxiv
Show abstract

Currently, there is substantial ongoing discussion around the functional role of the thalamus in consciousness. What is missing in the literature, however, is a systematic investigation of the relevance of specific thalamic nuclei in pharmacologically and pathologically altered states of consciousness in humans. Using functional neuroimaging in both healthy anaesthetised volunteers and patients with disorders of consciousness (DOC), we sought to identify which specific thalamic subregions in both cohorts may be differentially significant for loss of consciousness. Our findings revealed that the pulvinar (Pu) and ventral-latero-ventral (VLV) nuclei, in anaesthesia, and the VLV, in DOC, had distinct functional connectivity patterns related to the default mode and somatomotor networks. Remarkably, among all nuclei, the Pu was found to have the strongest functional connectivity change with anaesthetic-induced loss of consciousness, while in DOC patients, we found the VLV revealed the strongest connectivity change in comparison with healthy controls. Furthermore, we provide evidence that this neural connectivity biomarker in patients also mirrors the changes observed at the behavioural level, which could have clinical implications for targeted deep brain stimulation in therapy for DOC.

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