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How Electroencephalography Serves the Anesthesiologist

Authors :
Audrey Vanhaudenhuyse
Robert D. Sanders
Jamie Sleigh
Jean-François Brichant
Vincent Bonhomme
Steven Laureys
Marie-Aurélie Bruno
Nicolas Marchant
Source :
Clinical EEG and Neuroscience. 45:22-32
Publication Year :
2014
Publisher :
SAGE Publications, 2014.

Abstract

Major clinical endpoints of general anesthesia, such as the alteration of consciousness, are achieved through effects of anesthetic agents on the central nervous system, and, more precisely, on the brain. Historically, clinicians and researchers have always been interested in quantifying and characterizing those effects through recordings of surface brain electrical activity, namely electroencephalography (EEG). Over decades of research, the complex signal has been dissected to extract its core substance, with significant advances in the interpretation of the information it may contain. Methodological, engineering, statistical, mathematical, and computer progress now furnishes advanced tools that not only allow quantification of the effects of anesthesia, but also shed light on some aspects of anesthetic mechanisms. In this article, we will review how advanced EEG serves the anesthesiologist in that respect, but will not review other intraoperative utilities that have no direct relationship with consciousness, such as monitoring of brain and spinal cord integrity. We will start with a reminder of anesthestic effects on raw EEG and its time and frequency domain components, as well as a summary of the EEG analysis techniques of use for the anesthesiologist. This will introduce the description of the use of EEG to assess the depth of the hypnotic and anti-nociceptive components of anesthesia, and its clinical utility. The last part will describe the use of EEG for the understanding of mechanisms of anesthesia-induced alteration of consciousness. We will see how, eventually in association with transcranial magnetic stimulation, it allows exploring functional cerebral networks during anesthesia. We will also see how EEG recordings during anesthesia, and their sophisticated analysis, may help corroborate current theories of mental content generation.

Details

ISSN :
21695202 and 15500594
Volume :
45
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Clinical EEG and Neuroscience
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....0135c2b4b1ac990fe0427e10725cbaf7
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1177/1550059413509801