Author
Listed:
- Aaron E. L. Warren
(Harvard Medical School
Harvard Medical School)
- Marina Raguž
(Dubrava University Hospital
Catholic University of Croatia)
- Helen Friedrich
(Harvard Medical School
Faculty of Medicine)
- Frederic L. W. V. J. Schaper
(Harvard Medical School)
- Jordy Tasserie
(Harvard Medical School)
- Samuel B. Snider
(Harvard Medical School)
- Jian Li
(Harvard Medical School
Harvard Medical School)
- Melissa M. J. Chua
(Harvard Medical School
Harvard Medical School)
- Konstantin Butenko
(Harvard Medical School)
- Maximilian U. Friedrich
(Harvard Medical School)
- Rohan Jha
(Harvard Medical School
Harvard Medical School)
- Juan E. Iglesias
(Harvard Medical School
University College London
Massachusetts Institute of Technology)
- Patrick W. Carney
(Monash University
Florey Institute of Neuroscience and Mental Health)
- David Fischer
(University of Pennsylvania)
- Michael D. Fox
(Harvard Medical School)
- Aaron D. Boes
(University of Iowa)
- Brian L. Edlow
(Harvard Medical School
Harvard Medical School)
- Andreas Horn
(Harvard Medical School
Harvard Medical School
University Hospital Cologne
Harvard Medical School)
- Darko Chudy
(Dubrava University Hospital
University of Zagreb)
- John D. Rolston
(Harvard Medical School
Harvard Medical School)
Abstract
Disorders of consciousness are characterized by severe impairments in arousal and awareness. Deep brain stimulation is a potential treatment, but outcomes vary—possibly due to differences in patient characteristics, electrode placement, or the specific brain network engaged. We describe 40 patients with disorders of consciousness undergoing deep brain stimulation targeting the thalamic centromedian-parafascicular complex. Improvements in consciousness are associated with better-preserved gray matter, particularly in the striatum. Electric field modeling reveals that stimulation is most effective when it extends below the centromedian nucleus, engaging the inferior parafascicular nucleus and the adjacent ventral tegmental tract—a pathway that connects the brainstem and hypothalamus and runs along the midbrain-thalamus border. External validation analyses show that effective stimulation engages a brain network overlapping with disrupted patterns of brain activity observed in two independent cohorts with impaired consciousness: one with arousal-impairing stroke lesions and the other with awareness-impairing seizures. Together, these findings advance the field by informing patient selection, refining stimulation targets, and identifying a brain network linked to recovery that may have broader therapeutic relevance across consciousness-impairing conditions.
Suggested Citation
Aaron E. L. Warren & Marina Raguž & Helen Friedrich & Frederic L. W. V. J. Schaper & Jordy Tasserie & Samuel B. Snider & Jian Li & Melissa M. J. Chua & Konstantin Butenko & Maximilian U. Friedrich & R, 2025.
"A human brain network linked to restoration of consciousness after deep brain stimulation,"
Nature Communications, Nature, vol. 16(1), pages 1-16, December.
Handle:
RePEc:nat:natcom:v:16:y:2025:i:1:d:10.1038_s41467-025-61988-4
DOI: 10.1038/s41467-025-61988-4
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