Society of Fellows, Harvard University, Cambridge, United States.
Athinoula A. Martinos Center for Biomedical Imaging, Department of Radiology, Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, United States.
Elife. 2018 Aug 10;7:e33250. doi: 10.7554/eLife.33250.
During awake consciousness, the brain intrinsically maintains a dynamical state in which it can coordinate complex responses to sensory input. How the brain reaches this state spontaneously is not known. General anesthesia provides a unique opportunity to examine how the human brain recovers its functional capabilities after profound unconsciousness. We used intracranial electrocorticography and scalp EEG in humans to track neural dynamics during emergence from propofol general anesthesia. We identify a distinct transient brain state that occurs immediately prior to recovery of behavioral responsiveness. This state is characterized by large, spatially distributed, slow sensory-evoked potentials that resemble the K-complexes that are hallmarks of stage two sleep. However, the ongoing spontaneous dynamics in this transitional state differ from sleep. These results identify an asymmetry in the neurophysiology of induction and emergence, as the emerging brain can enter a state with a sleep-like sensory blockade before regaining responsivity to arousing stimuli.
在清醒意识期间,大脑内在地维持一种动态状态,使其能够协调对感觉输入的复杂反应。大脑如何自发地达到这种状态尚不清楚。全身麻醉为研究人类大脑在深度无意识后如何恢复其功能能力提供了独特的机会。我们使用颅内脑电图和头皮 EEG 在人类中跟踪异丙酚全身麻醉后苏醒过程中的神经动力学。我们确定了一个独特的短暂脑状态,它发生在行为反应恢复之前。该状态的特征是大的、空间分布的、缓慢的感觉诱发电位,类似于第二阶段睡眠的标志性 K 复合物。然而,在这个过渡状态中的持续自发动力学不同于睡眠。这些结果表明诱导和苏醒的神经生理学存在不对称性,因为苏醒中的大脑在对唤醒刺激重新产生反应之前,可以进入一种类似睡眠的感觉阻断状态。