» Articles » PMID: 17103250

Using EEG to Monitor Anesthesia Drug Effects During Surgery

Overview
Publisher Springer
Date 2006 Nov 15
PMID 17103250
Citations 30
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

The use of processed electroencephalography (EEG) using a simple frontal lead system has been made available for assessing the impact of anesthetic medications during surgery. This review discusses the basic principles behind these devices. The foundations of anesthesia monitoring rest on the observations of Guedel with ether that the depth of anesthesia relates to the cortical, brainstem and spinal effects of the anesthetic agents. Anesthesiologists strive to have a patient who is immobile, is unconscious, is hemodynamically stable and who has no intraoperative awareness or recall. These anesthetic management principles apply today, despite the absence of ether from the available anesthetic medications. The use of the EEG as a supplement to the usual monitoring techniques rests on the observation that anesthetic medications all alter the synaptic function which produces the EEG. Frontal EEG can be viewed as a surrogate for the drug effects on the entire central nervous system (CNS). Using mathematical processing techniques, commercial EEG devices create an index usually between 0 and 100 to characterize this drug effect. Critical aspects of memory formation occur in the frontal lobes making EEG monitoring in this area a possible method to assess risk of recall. Integration of processed EEG monitoring into anesthetic management is evolving and its ability to characterize all of the anesthetic effects on the CNS (in particular awareness and recall) and improve decision making is under study.

Citing Articles

Personalized anesthesia and precision medicine: a comprehensive review of genetic factors, artificial intelligence, and patient-specific factors.

Zeng S, Qing Q, Xu W, Yu S, Zheng M, Tan H Front Med (Lausanne). 2024; 11:1365524.

PMID: 38784235 PMC: 11111965. DOI: 10.3389/fmed.2024.1365524.


EEG microstate quantifiers and state space descriptors during anaesthesia in patients with postoperative delirium: a descriptive analysis.

Neuner B, Wolter S, McCarthy W, Spies C, Cunningham C, Radtke F Brain Commun. 2023; 5(6):fcad270.

PMID: 37942086 PMC: 10629467. DOI: 10.1093/braincomms/fcad270.


Can pain under anesthesia be measured? Pain-related brain function using functional near-infrared spectroscopy during knee surgery.

Karunakaran K, Peng K, Green S, Sieberg C, Mizrahi-Arnaud A, Gomez-Morad A Neurophotonics. 2023; 10(2):025014.

PMID: 37304733 PMC: 10251429. DOI: 10.1117/1.NPh.10.2.025014.


Mechanisms and implications in gene polymorphism mediated diverse reponses to sedatives, analgesics and muscle relaxants.

Sun Y, Zhu H, Esmaeili E, Tang X, Wu Z Korean J Anesthesiol. 2023; 76(2):89-98.

PMID: 36935389 PMC: 10078998. DOI: 10.4097/kja.22654.


Adequacy of Anesthesia Guidance for Colonoscopy Procedures.

Stasiowski M, Starzewska M, Niewiadomska E, Krol S, Marczak K, Zak J Pharmaceuticals (Basel). 2021; 14(5).

PMID: 34069155 PMC: 8157001. DOI: 10.3390/ph14050464.


References
1.
Barr G, Anderson R, Owall A, Jakobsson J . Effects on the bispectral index during medium-high dose fentanyl induction with or without propofol supplement. Acta Anaesthesiol Scand. 2000; 44(7):807-11. DOI: 10.1034/j.1399-6576.2000.440707.x. View

2.
Ge S, Zhuang X, Wang Y, Wang Z, Li H . Changes in the rapidly extracted auditory evoked potentials index and the bispectral index during sedation induced by propofol or midazolam under epidural block. Br J Anaesth. 2002; 89(2):260-4. DOI: 10.1093/bja/aef187. View

3.
Hagihira S, Takashina M, Mori T, Ueyama H, Mashimo T . Electroencephalographic bicoherence is sensitive to noxious stimuli during isoflurane or sevoflurane anesthesia. Anesthesiology. 2004; 100(4):818-25. DOI: 10.1097/00000542-200404000-00011. View

4.
Sinensky M, Pinkerton F, Sutherland E, Simon F . Rate limitation of (Na+ + K+)-stimulated adenosinetriphosphatase by membrane acyl chain ordering. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 1979; 76(10):4893-7. PMC: 413044. DOI: 10.1073/pnas.76.10.4893. View

5.
Carla V, Moroni F . General anaesthetics inhibit the responses induced by glutamate receptor agonists in the mouse cortex. Neurosci Lett. 1992; 146(1):21-4. DOI: 10.1016/0304-3940(92)90162-z. View