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SeeMe: An Automated Tool to Detect Early Recovery After Brain Injury

SeeMe: An Automated Tool to Detect Early Recovery After Brain Injury

Recruiting
18-85 years
All
Phase N/A

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Overview

Early prediction of outcomes after acute brain injury (ABI) remains a major unsolved problem. Presently, physicians make predictions using clinical examination, traditional scoring systems, and statistical models. In this study, we will use a novel technique, "SeeMe," to objectively assess the level of consciousness in patients suffering from comas following ABI. SeeMe is a program that quantifies total facial motion over time and compares the response after a spoken command (i.e. "open your eyes") to a pre-stimulus baseline.

Description

Acute brain injury (ABI) recovers at a variable rate. While some progress has been made in predicting long-term outcomes in traumatic brain injury (TBI) and intracranial hemorrhage, there is a critical need for short-term prediction of outcomes, in the first days and weeks after injury. With advances in machine learning and artificial intelligence, there is a growing interest in facial analysis and its application in neurological and psychiatric disorders. Here we describe "SeeMe," a novel automated objective measure of consciousness based on microexpression analyses in response to auditory commands. In measuring the smallest muscular movements undetectable by clinical observation, this technique has the high spatial resolution needed to detect hidden signs of recovery and the high temporal resolution needed to study neural circuits.

Eligibility

Inclusion Criteria:

  • 18 years old or older
  • Healthy Volunteers
  • Comatose patients (patients with a GCS < 9) due to an acute brain injury (traumatic brain injury, spontaneous subarachnoid hemorrhage, severe meningoencephalitis, etc.)

Exclusion Criteria:

  • A history of a neurologically debilitating disease (i.e., dementia, glioblastoma, Alzheimer's, multiple sclerosis, major vessel stroke, previous severe TBI, etc.)
  • Any other medical condition that, in the judgment of the investigator, makes participation in the study unsafe.
  • Pregnant subjects
  • Comatose patients without a legal authorized representative (LAR)
  • Prisoners or wards of the state
  • Persons who have not attained the legal age for consent to treatments or procedures

Study details
    Disorder of Consciousness
    Consciousness
    Loss of
    Trauma
    Brain
    Traumatic Brain Injury
    Acute Brain Injury

NCT06083441

Stony Brook University

28 January 2024

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