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Coma and Stupor

2008
Publisher Summary Consciousness is a state of awareness of self and environment that gives significance to stimuli from the internal and external environment. It depends on two critical components – cognitive content and arousal. Impairment of arousal leads to obtundation, stupor, or coma, and a secondary impairment of cognitive content that may be ...
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The JFK Coma Recovery Scale-Revised: measurement characteristics and diagnostic utility.

Archives of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation, 2004
J. Giacino, K. Kalmar, J. Whyte
semanticscholar   +1 more source

Classification of coma

Acta Neurochirurgica, 1976
By order of the Head Injuries Committee of the W.F.N.S. the author and his coworkers give definitions of consciousness, clouding of consciouness and unconciousness or coma. Furthermore, they suggest a definition of the termination of unconsciousness, with particular reference to the transition into a stage of clouding of consciousness.
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Coma blisters sans coma.

Cutis, 2012
Coma blisters (CBs) are self-limited lesions that occur in regions of pressure during unconscious states classically induced by barbiturates. We report a case of CBs sans coma that were histologically confirmed in a 41-year-old woman who developed multiple tense abdominal bullae with surrounding erythema following a transatlantic flight. Interestingly,
Silke, Heinisch   +3 more
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Myxedema Coma

Reviews in Endocrine and Metabolic Disorders, 2003
Fliers, Eric, Wiersinga, Wilmar M.
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Sign of coma

Applied Optics, 1988
The oblique focusing defect of spherical lenses, known as coma, is described by Seidel as the second of five correction terms (third order) to the Gauss theory. The concept is clear for a refracting surface that is free of spherical aberration; however, the impossibility of eliminating spherical aberration from a single lens with spherical surfaces can
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Neuroscience of coma

Coma and disorders of consciousness are frequently considered in terms of two linked anatomic-functional systems: the arousal system and the awareness system. The mesopontine tegmentum (namely the cuneiform/subcuneiform nuclei of the caudal midbrain and the pontis oralis nucleus of the rostral pons) and the monoamine nuclei generate signals of arousal.
Abid Y, Qureshi, Robert D, Stevens
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The Glasgow Coma Scale at 40 years: standing the test of time.

Lancet Neurology, 2014
G. Teasdale   +5 more
semanticscholar   +1 more source

Coma

Disease-a-Month, 1961
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