Using EEG to monitor anesthesia drug effects during surgery

被引:86
作者
Jameson L.C. [1 ]
Sloan T.B. [1 ]
机构
[1] Department of Anesthesiology, University of Colorado at Denver, Health Sciences Center, Denver, CO 80262
关键词
Anesthesia; Electroencephalography; Monitoring;
D O I
10.1007/s10877-006-9044-x
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
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. © Springer 2006.
引用
收藏
页码:445 / 472
页数:27
相关论文
共 171 条
[61]  
Crippen D., Using bedside EEGs to monitor sedation during neuromuscular blockade, J Crit Ill, 12, pp. 519-524, (1997)
[62]  
Llinas R.R., Leznik E., Urbano F.J., Temporal binding via cortical coincidence detection of specific and nonspecific thalamocortical inputs: A voltage-dependent dye-imaging study in mouse brain slices, Proc Natl Acad Sci USA, 99, pp. 449-454, (2002)
[63]  
Rodriguez E., George N., Lachaux J.P., Martinerie J., Renault B., Varela F.J., Perception's shadow: Long-distance synchronization of human brain activity, Nature, 397, pp. 430-433, (1999)
[64]  
Thompson E., Varela F., Radical embodiment: Neural dynamics and consciousness, Trends Cogn, 5, pp. 418-425, (2001)
[65]  
Jensen E., Litvan H., Struys M., Martinez-Vasquez P., Pitfalls and challenges when assessing the depth of hypnosis during general anaesthesia by clinical signs and electronic indices, Acta Anaesthesiol Scand, 48, pp. 1260-1267, (2004)
[66]  
Stockard J., Bickford R., The neurophysiology of anesthesia, A Basis and Practice of Neuroanesthesia, pp. 3-50, (1981)
[67]  
Newman J., Thalamic contributions to attention and consciousness, Conscious Cogn, 4, pp. 172-193, (1995)
[68]  
Tallon-Baudry C., Oscillatory synchrony as a signature for the unity of visual experience, Consciousness and Cognition in 4th Conference of the Association for the Scientific Study of Consciousness, (2000)
[69]  
Rampil I.J., A primer for EEG signal processing in anesthesia, Anesthesiology, 89, pp. 980-1002, (1998)
[70]  
Winters W.D., Effects of drugs on the electrical activity of the brain: Anesthetics, Annu Rev Pharmacol Toxicol, 16, pp. 413-426, (1976)