Coma-Dr. AM Iyagba
Coma-Dr. AM Iyagba
Coma-Dr. AM Iyagba
1. Components of consciousness
2. What is coma?
3. Causes of coma
4. Pathogenesis of coma
5. Approach to the unconscious patient
6. Prognosis
7. Differential diagnosis of coma
8. Herniation syndromes
9. Brain death
Components of consciousness
• Consciousness has two components:
Arousal (or wakefulness)
Awareness (or responsiveness)
• These two components are used to identify the
major conditions of abnormal consciousness such
as:
Coma
Vegetative state
Locked-in state
What is coma?
• Coma is characterized by the absence of arousal
and awareness.
• It is a state of un-arousable unawareness.
• It is a sleep-like state in which the patient makes
no purposeful response to the environment and
from which he or she cannot be aroused.
• It results from a disturbance of either:
Brainstem RAS above the mid-pons or
Both cerebral hemispheres
Causes of coma
Structural or Metabolic
Structural causes of coma
1. Tumors → primary brain tumors, metastasis.
4. Electrolyte derangement
8. Disordered temperature
-↓Na+
regulation-
5. Systemic diseases -Hypothermia,
-Uremic encephalopathy
-Hepatic encephalopathy
-Hyperthermia.
-Anoxic encephalopathy
Pathogenesis of coma
Coma arises by one or a combination of two main
mechanisms:
• Nuchal rigidity
• Kernig’s sign
• Brudzinski’s sign
• Normal
• Pin point
• Thalamic pupils
• 3-4mm in diameter
• Constrict briskly
• 2mm in size
• Reactive to light
• 5-6mm in diameter.
1. Normal
2. Kussmaul’s
3. Cheyne-Stokes
4. Central neurogenic
hyperventilation or
pontine respiration
5.Apneusis
6.Ataxic
7.Gasping or agonal gasps
Investigating a coma patient
• Brain CT scan/Brain MRI • Complete blood count
• Blood glucose
• CSF analysis
• E/U/Cr plus Ca, Mg
• Chest xray
• LFTs
• ECG • ABG
• Locked-in state.
B-Subfalcine
C-Transtentorial (uncal)
D-Transtentorial (upward)
E-Tonsilar