BACKGROUND: Analgesia is a part of balanced anaesthesia, but direct indicators of nociception do not exist. We examined the relationship between motor reactions and physiological variables during skin incision in sevoflurane anaesthesia and hypothesized that nociception could be detected and graded by significant changes in these variables. METHODS: Thirty-one women scheduled for abdominal hysterectomy participated in the study. Anaesthesia was induced with fentanyl (1 microg kg(-1)), propofol (1 mg kg(-1)) and sevoflurane. Skin incision was performed 14 min after induction during 1.6% end-tidal sevoflurane anaesthesia without neuromuscular blockade. Electrocardiography (ECG), photoplethysmography (PPG) and electroencephalography (EEG) were registered, and a range of variables was computed from these signals. The postincision values, normalized with respect to their preincision values, of movers vs. non-movers were compared. The variables showing significant differences between movers and non-movers were used to develop a logistic regression equation for the classification of patients into movers or non-movers. RESULTS: Twenty-six patients were eligible for analysis, and 12 (46%) displayed a motor reaction to skin incision (movers). Many ECG, PPG and EEG-related variables showed significant differences between the pre- and postincision periods. The best classification performance, assessed by leave-one-out cross-validation, between movers and non-movers was achieved with the combination of response entropy of EEG, RR-interval and PPG notch amplitude. The corresponding equation yielded 96% correct classification with 90% sensitivity and 100% specificity. The classification performance of any single variable alone was considerably worse. CONCLUSION: Combination of information from different sources may be required for monitoring the adequacy of analgesia during anaesthesia.
BACKGROUND:Analgesia is a part of balanced anaesthesia, but direct indicators of nociception do not exist. We examined the relationship between motor reactions and physiological variables during skin incision in sevoflurane anaesthesia and hypothesized that nociception could be detected and graded by significant changes in these variables. METHODS: Thirty-one women scheduled for abdominal hysterectomy participated in the study. Anaesthesia was induced with fentanyl (1 microg kg(-1)), propofol (1 mg kg(-1)) and sevoflurane. Skin incision was performed 14 min after induction during 1.6% end-tidal sevoflurane anaesthesia without neuromuscular blockade. Electrocardiography (ECG), photoplethysmography (PPG) and electroencephalography (EEG) were registered, and a range of variables was computed from these signals. The postincision values, normalized with respect to their preincision values, of movers vs. non-movers were compared. The variables showing significant differences between movers and non-movers were used to develop a logistic regression equation for the classification of patients into movers or non-movers. RESULTS: Twenty-six patients were eligible for analysis, and 12 (46%) displayed a motor reaction to skin incision (movers). Many ECG, PPG and EEG-related variables showed significant differences between the pre- and postincision periods. The best classification performance, assessed by leave-one-out cross-validation, between movers and non-movers was achieved with the combination of response entropy of EEG, RR-interval and PPG notch amplitude. The corresponding equation yielded 96% correct classification with 90% sensitivity and 100% specificity. The classification performance of any single variable alone was considerably worse. CONCLUSION: Combination of information from different sources may be required for monitoring the adequacy of analgesia during anaesthesia.
Authors: Chris J Brouse; Walter Karlen; Guy A Dumont; Dorothy Myers; Erin Cooke; Jonathan Stinson; Joanne Lim; J Mark Ansermino Journal: J Clin Monit Comput Date: 2013-04-09 Impact factor: 2.502
Authors: Tammy Y Euliano; Kostas Michalopoulos; Savyasachi Singh; Anthony R Gregg; Mariem Del Rio; Terrie Vasilopoulos; Amber M Johnson; Allison Onkala; Shalom Darmanjian; Neil R Euliano; Monique Ho Journal: Anesth Analg Date: 2018-03 Impact factor: 5.108
Authors: Barbara Mali; Vojka Gorjup; Ibrahim Edhemovic; Erik Brecelj; Maja Cemazar; Gregor Sersa; Branka Strazisar; Damijan Miklavcic; Tomaz Jarm Journal: Biomed Eng Online Date: 2015-08-27 Impact factor: 2.819