Harvard: Origin of human consciousness may lie in newly pinpointed brain network. Philosophers have long struggled to define human consciousness. Now, a
team of researchers led by neurologists at Harvard Medical School and
Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center has pinpointed the regions of the
brain that may play a role maintaining it. Their findings, which have already garnered multiple awards from the
American Academy of Neurology, were published Nov. 4 in that society’s
journal, Neurology.
“For the first time, we have found a connection between the brainstem
region involved in arousal and regions involved in awareness, two
prerequisites for consciousness,” said Michael Fox,
HMS assistant professor of neurology at Beth Israel Deaconess. “A lot
of pieces of evidence all came together to point to this network playing
a role in human consciousness.”
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Classical neurology holds that arousal and awareness are two critical
components of consciousness. Arousal is likely regulated by the
brainstem—the portion of the brain, contiguous with the spinal cord,
that is responsible for the sleep-wake cycle and cardiac and respiratory
rates.
Awareness, another critical component of consciousness, has long been
thought to reside somewhere in the cortex, the outer layer of the brain
responsible for many of its higher functions.
The researchers analyzed 36 patients with brainstem lesions; 12 led to coma and 24 did not.
Mapping the injuries revealed that a small coma-specific area of the
brainstem—the rostral dorsolateral pontine tegmentum—was significantly
associated with coma. Ten out of the 12 coma-inducing brainstem lesions
involved this area, while just one of the 24 control lesions did.
Armed with that information, Fox and colleagues, including lead
author David B. Fischer, HMS clinical fellow in medicine at Brigham and
Women’s Hospital, used a wiring diagram of the healthy human brain,
based on a large, shared data set called the Human Connectome, to
identify which other parts of the brain were connected to these
coma-causing lesions.
Their analysis revealed two areas in the cortex of the brain that
were significantly connected to the coma-specific region of the
brainstem. One sat in the left, ventral, anterior insula, the other in
the pregenual anterior cingulate cortex (pACC). Both regions have been
implicated previously in arousal and awareness.
“We now have a great map of how the brain is wired up in the Human
Connectome,” said Fox, who is also director of the Laboratory for Brain
Network Imaging and Modulation and the associate director of the
Berenson-Allen Center for Noninvasive Brain Stimulation at Beth Israel
Deaconess.
“We can look at not just the location of lesions, but also their
connectivity," he said. "Over the past year, researchers in my lab have
used this approach to understand visual and auditory hallucinations,
impaired speech and movement disorders. A collaborative team of
neuroscientists and physicians had the insight and unique expertise
needed to apply this approach to consciousness.
The team included co-lead author, Aaron Boes, and co-senior author,
Joel Geerling, both formerly of Beth Israel Deaconess and now of
University of Iowa Carver College of Medicine.
Finally, the team investigated whether this brainstem-cortex network
was functioning in another subset of patients with disorders of
consciousness, including coma. Using a special type of MRI scan, the
scientists found that their newly identified “consciousness network” was
disrupted in patients with impaired consciousness.
The findings—bolstered by data from rodent studies—suggest the
network between the brainstem and these two cortical regions plays a
role in maintaining human consciousness.
“The added value of thinking about coma as a network disorder is it
presents possible targets for therapy, such as using brain stimulation
to augment recovery,” Boes said.
A next step, Fox notes, may be to investigate other data sets in
which patients lost consciousness to find out if the same, different or
overlapping neural networks are involved.
“This is most relevant if we can use these networks as a target for
brain stimulation for people with disorders of consciousness,” said Fox.
“If we zero in on the regions and network involved, can we someday wake
someone up who is in a persistent vegetative state? That’s the ultimate
question.”