Nonlinear dynamics captures brain states at different levels of consciousness in patients anesthetized with propofol
Autor: | Divya Chander, Christina Reynolds, Sarah L. Eagleman, M. Bruce MacIver, Nicholas T. Ouellette |
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Jazyk: | angličtina |
Rok vydání: | 2019 |
Předmět: |
Male
Brain activity and meditation Physiology Electroencephalography Pathology and Laboratory Medicine Systems Science 0302 clinical medicine Level of consciousness 030202 anesthesiology Anesthesiology Medicine and Health Sciences Anesthesia Propofol media_common Clinical Neurophysiology Aged 80 and over Brain Mapping Multidisciplinary medicine.diagnostic_test Pharmaceutics Unconsciousness Information processing Drugs Brain Signal Processing Computer-Assisted Middle Aged Electrophysiology Bioassays and Physiological Analysis Brain Electrophysiology Ellipses Physical Sciences Medicine Female medicine.symptom Psychology medicine.drug Research Article Adult Computer and Information Sciences Consciousness Imaging Techniques Science media_common.quotation_subject Cognitive Neuroscience Neurophysiology Geometry Neuroimaging Surgical and Invasive Medical Procedures Research and Analysis Methods Syncope 03 medical and health sciences Young Adult Signs and Symptoms Drug Therapy Diagnostic Medicine medicine Pain Management Humans Anesthetics Aged Retrospective Studies Pharmacology Electrophysiological Techniques Biology and Life Sciences Brain Waves Nonlinear system Nonlinear Dynamics Cognitive Science Clinical Medicine Neuroscience 030217 neurology & neurosurgery Mathematics |
Zdroj: | PLoS ONE PLoS ONE, Vol 14, Iss 10, p e0223921 (2019) |
ISSN: | 1932-6203 |
Popis: | The information processing capability of the brain decreases during unconscious states. Capturing this decrease during anesthesia-induced unconsciousness has been attempted using standard spectral analyses as these correlate relatively well with breakdowns in corticothalamic networks. Much of this work has involved the use of propofol to perturb brain activity, as it is one of the most widely used anesthetics for routine surgical anesthesia. Propofol administration alone produces EEG spectral characteristics similar to most hypnotics; however, inter-individual and drug variation render spectral measures inconsistent. Complexity measures of EEG signals could offer better measures to distinguish brain states, because brain activity exhibits nonlinear behavior at several scales during transitions of consciousness. We tested the potential of complexity analyses from nonlinear dynamics to identify loss and recovery of consciousness at clinically relevant timepoints. Patients undergoing propofol general anesthesia for various surgical procedures were identified as having changes in states of consciousness by the loss and recovery of response to verbal stimuli after induction and upon cessation of anesthesia, respectively. We demonstrate that nonlinear dynamics analyses showed more significant differences between consciousness states than spectral measures. Notably, attractors in conscious and anesthesia-induced unconscious states exhibited significantly different shapes. These shapes have implications for network connectivity, information processing, and the total number of states available to the brain at these different levels. They also reflect some of our general understanding of the network effects of consciousness in a way that spectral measures cannot. Thus, complexity measures could provide a universal means for reliably capturing depth of consciousness based on EEG changes at the beginning and end of anesthesia administration. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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