Hight Darren, Voss Logan J, Garcia Paul S, Sleigh Jamie
Department of Anaesthesia, Waikato Clinical Campus, University of AucklandHamilton, New Zealand.
Department of Anaesthesia, Waikato District Health BoardHamilton, New Zealand.
Front Syst Neurosci. 2017 May 29;11:36. doi: 10.3389/fnsys.2017.00036. eCollection 2017.
Oscillations in the electroencephalogram (EEG) at the alpha frequency (8-12 Hz) are thought to be ubiquitous during surgical anesthesia, but the details of how this oscillation responds to ongoing changes in volatile anesthetic concentration have not been well characterized. It is not known how often alpha oscillations are absent in the clinical context, how sensitively alpha frequency and power respond to changes in anesthetic concentration, and what effect increased age has on alpha frequency. Bipolar EEG was recorded frontally from 305 patients undergoing surgery with sevoflurane or desflurane providing general anesthesia. A new method of detecting the presence of alpha oscillations based on the stability of the rate of change of the peak frequency in the alpha range was developed. Linear concentration-response curves were fitted to assess the sensitivity of alpha power and frequency measures to changing levels of anesthesia. Alpha oscillations were seen to be inexplicably absent in around 4% of patients. Maximal alpha power increased with increasing volatile anesthetic concentrations in half of the patients, and decreased in the remaining patients. Alpha frequency decreased with increasing anesthetic concentrations in near to 90% of patients. Increasing age was associated with decreased sensitivity to volatile anesthesia concentrations, and with decreased alpha frequency, which sometimes transitioned into the theta range (5-7 Hz). While peak alpha frequency shows a consistent slowing to increasing volatile concentrations, the peak power of the oscillation does not, suggesting that frequency might be more informative of depth of anesthesia than traditional power based measures during volatile-based anesthesia. The alpha oscillation becomes slower with increasing age, even when the decreased anesthetic needs of older patients were taken into account.
脑电图(EEG)中的α波频率(8 - 12赫兹)振荡被认为在手术麻醉期间普遍存在,但这种振荡如何响应挥发性麻醉剂浓度的持续变化的细节尚未得到充分表征。目前尚不清楚在临床环境中α波振荡缺失的频率、α波频率和功率对麻醉剂浓度变化的敏感程度,以及年龄增长对α波频率有何影响。对305例接受七氟醚或地氟醚全身麻醉手术的患者进行额叶双极脑电图记录。开发了一种基于α范围内峰值频率变化率稳定性来检测α波振荡存在的新方法。拟合线性浓度 - 反应曲线以评估α波功率和频率测量对麻醉水平变化的敏感性。在约4%的患者中,α波振荡莫名其妙地缺失。在一半的患者中,最大α波功率随着挥发性麻醉剂浓度的增加而增加,而在其余患者中则降低。在近90%的患者中,α波频率随着麻醉剂浓度的增加而降低。年龄增长与对挥发性麻醉剂浓度的敏感性降低以及α波频率降低有关,α波频率有时会转变为θ波范围(5 - 7赫兹)。虽然随着挥发性浓度的增加峰值α波频率持续减慢,但振荡的峰值功率并非如此,这表明在基于挥发性麻醉的过程中,频率可能比传统的基于功率的测量更能反映麻醉深度。即使考虑到老年患者麻醉需求的降低,α波振荡也会随着年龄的增长而变慢。