Université de Lorraine, Inria, LORIA, Neurosys team, 615 rue du Jardin Botanique, Vandoeuvre-lès-Nancy, France.
CHU Brugmann, Université Libre de Bruxelles, Place A.Van Gehuchten 4, Bruxelles, 1020, Belgium.
Trials. 2019 Aug 28;20(1):534. doi: 10.1186/s13063-019-3596-9.
Accidental Accidental awareness during general anesthesia (AAGA) occurs in 1-2% of high-risk practice patients and is a cause of severe psychological trauma, termed post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD). However, no monitoring techniques can accurately predict or detect AAGA. Since the first reflex for a patient during AAGA is to move, a passive brain-computer interface (BCI) based on the detection of an intention of movement would be conceivable to alert the anesthetist. However, the way in which propofol (i.e., an anesthetic commonly used for the general anesthesia induction) affects motor brain activity within the electroencephalographic (EEG) signal has been poorly investigated and is not clearly understood. For this reason, a detailed study of the motor activity behavior with a step-wise increasing dose of propofol is required and would provide a proof of concept for such an innovative BCI. The main goal of this study is to highlight the occurrence of movement attempt patterns, mainly changes in oscillations called event-related desynchronization (ERD) and event-related synchronization (ERS), in the EEG signal over the motor cortex, in healthy subjects, without and under propofol sedation, during four different motor tasks.
MOTANA is an interventional, prospective, exploratory, physiological, monocentric, and randomized study conducted in healthy volunteers under light anesthesia, involving EEG measurements before and after target-controlled infusion of propofol at three different effect-site concentrations (0 μg.ml , 0.5 μg.ml , and 1.0 μg.ml ). In this exploratory study, 30 healthy volunteers will perform 50 trials for the four motor tasks (real movement, motor imagery, motor imagery with median nerve stimulation, and median nerve stimulation alone) in a randomized sequence. In each conditions and for each trial, we will observe changes in terms of ERD and ERS according to the three propofol concentrations. Pre- and post-injection comparisons of propofol will be performed by paired series tests.
MOTANA is an exploratory study aimed at designing an innovative BCI based on EEG-motor brain activity that would detect an attempt to move by a patient under anesthesia. This would be of interest in the prevention of AAGA.
Agence Nationale de Sécurité du Médicament (EUDRACT 2017-004198-1), NCT03362775. Registered on 29 August 2018. https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT03362775?term=03362775&rank=1.
全身麻醉期间的意外意识(AAGA)在高危患者中发生率为 1-2%,是严重心理创伤的原因,称为创伤后应激障碍(PTSD)。然而,没有监测技术可以准确预测或检测到 AAGA。由于患者在 AAGA 期间的第一个反射是移动,因此基于运动意图检测的被动脑机接口(BCI)可以提醒麻醉师。然而,丙泊酚(即用于全身麻醉诱导的麻醉剂)如何影响脑电图(EEG)信号中的运动脑活动尚未得到充分研究,也未得到明确理解。出于这个原因,需要对逐步增加丙泊酚剂量的运动活动行为进行详细研究,并为这种创新的 BCI 提供概念验证。本研究的主要目标是强调在健康受试者中,在没有和在丙泊酚镇静下,在四个不同的运动任务中,运动皮层的 EEG 信号中运动尝试模式的发生,主要是称为事件相关去同步(ERD)和事件相关同步(ERS)的振荡变化。
MOTANA 是一项在轻度麻醉下的健康志愿者中进行的干预性、前瞻性、探索性、生理学、单中心、随机研究,涉及丙泊酚靶控输注前后的 EEG 测量,丙泊酚效应部位浓度为三个不同浓度(0μg.ml 、0.5μg.ml 和 1.0μg.ml )。在这项探索性研究中,30 名健康志愿者将以随机顺序进行四项运动任务(真实运动、运动想象、正中神经刺激运动想象和正中神经刺激单独)的 50 次试验。在每种情况下和每次试验中,我们将根据三种丙泊酚浓度观察 ERD 和 ERS 的变化。通过配对系列检验进行预注和后注丙泊酚的比较。
MOTANA 是一项探索性研究,旨在设计一种基于 EEG-运动脑活动的创新 BCI,该 BCI 将检测麻醉患者的移动尝试。这对于预防 AAGA 很有意义。
法国国家药品安全局(EUDRACT 2017-004198-1),NCT03362775。于 2018 年 8 月 29 日注册。[URL]