The Efficacy of Familiar Voice Stimulation During Coma Recovery (FAST)
Traumatic Brain Injury, Coma, Vegetative State
About this trial
This is an interventional treatment trial for Traumatic Brain Injury focused on measuring Randomized Clinical Trial, Auditory Stimulation
Eligibility Criteria
Inclusion Criteria:
- Severe brain injury of traumatic origin
- Non-brain penetrating gun shot wound
- Blunt trauma with subsequent closed head injuries such as diffuse axonal injury
- 18 years of age or older
- Unconscious for at least 28 days consecutively
- Medically Stable
- Does not have active seizures
Exclusion Criteria:
- History of brain injury
- More than 1 year post injury
- MRI is contraindicated (e.g., metal, titanium in brain)
- Ventilator dependent
- Cardiac contraindications
- The definition of traumatic brain injury excludes: (a) Lacerations or contusions of the face, eye, ear or scalp and fractures of facial bones with-out loss of consciousness; (b) Primary cause of injury is blunt trauma (e.g., contusion from blow to head) without subsequent closed head injuries such as contra coup or diffuse axonal injury; (c) Brain-penetrating gun shot wound; (d) Primary BI due to anoxic, inflammatory, infectious, toxic metabolic encephalopathies; (e) Cancer, brain infarction (ischemic stroke), intracranial hemorrhage (hemorrhagic stroke) aneurysms and arterio-venous malformations.
Sites / Locations
- The Rehabilitation Institute of Chicago
- Edward Hines, Jr. VA Hospital
- Hunter Holmes McGuire VA Medical Center
Arms of the Study
Arm 1
Arm 2
Experimental
Sham Comparator
Familiar Auditory Sensory Training
Sham Auditory Sensory Training
FAST is a standardized passive auditory stimulation protocol. The patient is provided with customized recordings of stories told by people well known to the patient at least 1 year prior to injury. The stories represent specific events experienced by both the patient and the storyteller. The FAST protocol is provided on compact discs (CDs), using portable players and noise cancelling headphones, while patients were awake (ie, eyes open). Speakers were used for one patient not tolerating his headphones. The CDs were identical according to track duration, labeling, and administration procedures.
Placebo protocol is silence. Patients receive sham protocols for 10 minutes 4 times per day, with at least 2 hours in between, for 6 weeks.