| Literature DB >> 28701933 |
Stefanie Blain-Moraes1,2, Vijay Tarnal2,3, Giancarlo Vanini2,3, Tarik Bel-Behar2,3, Ellen Janke2,3, Paul Picton2,3, Goodarz Golmirzaie2,3, Ben J A Palanca4, Michael S Avidan4, Max B Kelz5, George A Mashour2,3,6.
Abstract
Recent studies have investigated local oscillations, long-range connectivity, and global network patterns to identify neural changes associated with anesthetic-induced unconsciousness. These studies typically employ anesthetic protocols that either just cross the threshold of unconsciousness, or induce deep unconsciousness for a brief period of time-neither of which models general anesthesia for major surgery. To study neural patterns of unconsciousness and recovery in a clinically-relevant context, we used a realistic anesthetic regimen to induce and maintain unconsciousness in eight healthy participants for 3 h. High-density electroencephalogram (EEG) was acquired throughout and for another 3 h after emergence. Seven epochs of 5-min eyes-closed resting states were extracted from the data at baseline as well as 30, 60, 90, 120, 150, and 180-min post-emergence. Additionally, 5-min epochs were extracted during induction, unconsciousness, and immediately prior to recovery of consciousness, for a total of 10 analysis epochs. The EEG data in each epoch were analyzed using source-localized spectral analysis, phase-lag index, and graph theoretical techniques. Posterior alpha power was significantly depressed during unconsciousness, and gradually approached baseline levels over the 3 h recovery period. Phase-lag index did not distinguish between states of consciousness or stages of recovery. Network efficiency was significantly depressed and network clustering coefficient was significantly increased during unconsciousness; these graph theoretical measures returned to baseline during the 3 h recovery period. Posterior alpha power may be a potential biomarker for normal recovery of functional brain networks after general anesthesia.Entities:
Keywords: alpha rhythm; cognition; consciousness; electroencephalography; general anesthesia; graph theory
Year: 2017 PMID: 28701933 PMCID: PMC5487412 DOI: 10.3389/fnhum.2017.00328
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Hum Neurosci ISSN: 1662-5161 Impact factor: 3.169
Figure 1Experimental design and timeline. Blue squares indicate the 5-min analysis epochs distributed throughout the experiment during which participants were asked to rest with their eyes closed. ROC, recovery of consciousness.
Figure 2Alpha bandwidth topography and power across ten analysis epochs. (A) Topographic mapping of alpha power; (B) Source-localized spectrogram of the superior parietal region; and (C) Mean alpha power in the superior parietal region (blue) and standard error across all participants (red). Base, Baseline consciousness; Induct, Induction; Uncons, Unconsciousness; ROC, Recovery of consciousness.
Figure 3Global functional connectivity calculated using phase lag index (PLI) across all analysis epochs. Error bars represent standard deviation. ROC, recovery of consciousness.
Figure 4Brain network properties across the experimental period: (A) path length; (B) clustering coefficient; (C) modularity; and (D) global efficiency. Error bars represent standard deviation, and *indicates epochs that are significantly different from the baseline (p < 0.05). Base, Baseline consciousness; Induct, Induction; Uncons, Unconsciousness; ROC, Recovery of consciousness.