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Decrease of the peak heights of EEG bicoherence indicated insufficiency of analgesia during surgery under general anesthesia.

Authors :
UNO, Rieko
HAGIHIRA, Satoshi
AIHARA, Satoshi
KAMIBAYASHI, Takahiko
Source :
Journal of Anesthesia. Dec2024, Vol. 38 Issue 6, p855-864. 10p.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

Background: Studies show that the two peak heights of electroencephalographic bicoherence (pBIC-high, pBIC-low) decrease after incision and are restored by fentanyl administration. We investigated whether pBICs are good indicators for adequacy of analgesia during surgery. Methods: After local ethical committee approval, we enrolled 50 patients (27–65 years, ASA-PS I or II) who were scheduled elective surgery. Besides standard anesthesia monitors, to assess pBICs, we used a BIS monitor and freeware Bispectrum Analyzer for A2000. Fentanyl 5 µg/kg was completely administered before incision, and anesthesia was maintained with sevoflurane. After skin incision, when the peak of pBIC-high or pBIC-low decreased by 10% in absolute value (named LT10-high and LT10-low groups in order) or when either peak decreased to below 20% (BL20-high and BL20-low groups), an additional 1 g/kg of fentanyl was administered to examine its effect on the peak that showed a decrease. Results: The mean values and standard deviation for pBIC-high 5 min before fentanyl administration, at the time of fentanyl administration, and 5 min after fentanyl administration for LT10-high group were 39.8% (10.9%), 26.9% (10.5%), and 35.7% (12.5%). And those for pBIC-low for LT10-low group were 39.5% (6.0%), 26.8% (6.4%) and 35.0% (7.0%). Those for pBIC-high for BL20-high group were 26.3% (5.6%), 16.5% (2.6%), and 25.7% (7.0%). And those for pBIC-low for BL20-low group were 26.7% (4.8%), 17.4% (1.8%) and 26.9% (5.7%), respectively. Meanwhile, at these trigger points, hemodynamic parameters didn't show significant changes. Conclusion: Superior to standard anesthesia monitoring, pBICs are better indicators of analgesia during surgery. Trial registry: Clinical trial Number and registry URL: UMIN ID: UMIN000042843 https://center6.umin.ac.jp/cgi-open-bin/ctr/ctr%5fview.cgi?recptno = R000048907 [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
09138668
Volume :
38
Issue :
6
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Journal of Anesthesia
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
181064324
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00540-024-03406-5