• Am. J. Med. Sci. · Mar 2014

    Clinical Trial

    Zolpidem arouses patients in vegetative state after brain injury: quantitative evaluation and indications.

    • Bo Du, Aijun Shan, Yujuan Zhang, Xianliang Zhong, Dong Chen, and Kunhao Cai.
    • Department of Emergency (BD, AS, XZ), Neurosurgery (DC, KC), and Ultrasound (YZ), Shenzhen People's Hospital, Jinan University, Shenzhen, China.
    • Am. J. Med. Sci. 2014 Mar 1; 347 (3): 178182178-82.

    BackgroundTo investigate the efficacy and indications of zolpidem, a nonbenzodiazepine hypnotic, inducing arousal in vegetative state patients after brain injury.MethodsOne hundred sixty-five patients were divided into 4 groups, according to area of brain damage and injury mechanism. All patients' brains were imaged by Tc-ECD single-photon emission computerized tomography (SPECT), before and 1 hour after treatment with 10 mg of zolpidem. Simultaneously, 3 quantitative indicators of brain function and damage were obtained using cerebral state monitor. Thirty-eight patients withdrew from the study after the first zolpidem dose. The remaining 127 patients received a daily dose of 10 mg of zolpidem for 1 week and were monitored again at the end of this week.ResultsOne hour after treatment with zolpidem, cerebral state index was increased and burst suppression reduced in both brain contrecoup contusion and space-occupying brain compression groups (P < 0.05). SPECT showed, 1 hour after medication, that cerebral perfusion was improved in both brain contrecoup contusion and space-occupying brain compression groups, but no changes were seen in primary and secondary brain stem injury groups. In the 127 patients' group, after 1 week of zolpidem treatment, all parameters obtained from cerebral state monitor were not statistically different compared with those after the initial medication (P > 0.05).ConclusionsZolpidem is an effective medicine to restore brain function in patients in vegetative state after brain injury, especially for those whose brain injuries are mainly in non-brain-stem areas. Improvement of brain function is sudden rather than gradual.

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