Purdon P L, Pavone K J, Akeju O, Smith A C, Sampson A L, Lee J, Zhou D W, Solt K, Brown E N
Department of Anesthesia, Critical Care and Pain Medicine, Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, MA, USA Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA, USA Department of Brain and Cognitive Science
Department of Anesthesia, Critical Care and Pain Medicine, Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, MA, USA.
Br J Anaesth. 2015 Jul;115 Suppl 1(Suppl 1):i46-i57. doi: 10.1093/bja/aev213.
Anaesthetic drugs act at sites within the brain that undergo profound changes during typical ageing. We postulated that anaesthesia-induced brain dynamics observed in the EEG change with age.
We analysed the EEG in 155 patients aged 18-90 yr who received propofol (n=60) or sevoflurane (n=95) as the primary anaesthetic. The EEG spectrum and coherence were estimated throughout a 2 min period of stable anaesthetic maintenance. Age-related effects were characterized by analysing power and coherence as a function of age using linear regression and by comparing the power spectrum and coherence in young (18- to 38-yr-old) and elderly (70- to 90-yr-old) patients.
Power across all frequency bands decreased significantly with age for both propofol and sevoflurane; elderly patients showed EEG oscillations ∼2- to 3-fold smaller in amplitude than younger adults. The qualitative form of the EEG appeared similar regardless of age, showing prominent alpha (8-12 Hz) and slow (0.1-1 Hz) oscillations. However, alpha band dynamics showed specific age-related changes. In elderly compared with young patients, alpha power decreased more than slow power, and alpha coherence and peak frequency were significantly lower. Older patients were more likely to experience burst suppression.
These profound age-related changes in the EEG are consistent with known neurobiological and neuroanatomical changes that occur during typical ageing. Commercial EEG-based depth-of-anaesthesia indices do not account for age and are therefore likely to be inaccurate in elderly patients. In contrast, monitoring the unprocessed EEG and its spectrogram can account for age and individual patient characteristics.
麻醉药物作用于大脑中在典型衰老过程中会发生深刻变化的部位。我们推测,脑电图(EEG)中观察到的麻醉诱导的脑动力学随年龄而变化。
我们分析了155例年龄在18至90岁之间接受丙泊酚(n = 60)或七氟醚(n = 95)作为主要麻醉剂的患者的脑电图。在稳定的麻醉维持2分钟期间估算脑电图频谱和相干性。通过使用线性回归分析功率和相干性作为年龄的函数,并比较年轻(18至38岁)和老年(70至90岁)患者的功率谱和相干性来表征与年龄相关的影响。
丙泊酚和七氟醚麻醉下,所有频段的功率均随年龄显著降低;老年患者的脑电图振荡幅度比年轻成年人小约2至3倍。无论年龄如何,脑电图的定性形式看起来相似,显示出明显的α波(8至12赫兹)和慢波(0.1至1赫兹)振荡。然而,α波频段动力学显示出特定的与年龄相关的变化。与年轻患者相比,老年患者的α波功率比慢波功率下降更多,并且α波相干性和峰值频率显著更低。老年患者更有可能出现爆发抑制。
脑电图中这些与年龄相关的深刻变化与典型衰老过程中已知的神经生物学和神经解剖学变化一致。基于脑电图的商业麻醉深度指数未考虑年龄因素,因此在老年患者中可能不准确。相比之下,监测未处理的脑电图及其频谱图可以考虑年龄和个体患者特征。