Department of Anesthesiology, University of Wisconsin, Madison, WI, 52704, USA; Department of Neuroscience, University of Wisconsin, Madison, WI, 53706, USA.
Department of Anesthesiology, University of Wisconsin, Madison, WI, 52704, USA.
Neuroimage. 2020 May 1;211:116627. doi: 10.1016/j.neuroimage.2020.116627. Epub 2020 Feb 8.
Disruption of cortical connectivity likely contributes to loss of consciousness (LOC) during both sleep and general anesthesia, but the degree of overlap in the underlying mechanisms is unclear. Both sleep and anesthesia comprise states of varying levels of arousal and consciousness, including states of largely maintained conscious experience (sleep: N1, REM; anesthesia: sedated but responsive) as well as states of substantially reduced conscious experience (sleep: N2/N3; anesthesia: unresponsive). Here, we tested the hypotheses that (1) cortical connectivity will exhibit clear changes when transitioning into states of reduced consciousness, and (2) these changes will be similar for arousal states of comparable levels of consciousness during sleep and anesthesia. Using intracranial recordings from five adult neurosurgical patients, we compared resting state cortical functional connectivity (as measured by weighted phase lag index, wPLI) in the same subjects across arousal states during natural sleep [wake (WS), N1, N2, N3, REM] and propofol anesthesia [pre-drug wake (WA), sedated/responsive (S), and unresponsive (U)]. Analysis of alpha-band connectivity indicated a transition boundary distinguishing states of maintained and reduced conscious experience in both sleep and anesthesia. In wake states WS and WA, alpha-band wPLI within the temporal lobe was dominant. This pattern was largely unchanged in N1, REM, and S. Transitions into states of reduced consciousness N2, N3, and U were characterized by dramatic changes in connectivity, with dominant connections shifting to prefrontal cortex. Secondary analyses indicated similarities in reorganization of cortical connectivity in sleep and anesthesia. Shifts from temporal to frontal cortical connectivity may reflect impaired sensory processing in states of reduced consciousness. The data indicate that functional connectivity can serve as a biomarker of arousal state and suggest common mechanisms of LOC in sleep and anesthesia.
皮层连接的中断可能导致睡眠和全身麻醉期间意识丧失(LOC),但潜在机制的重叠程度尚不清楚。睡眠和全身麻醉都包含不同程度的觉醒和意识状态,包括意识体验基本保持的状态(睡眠:N1、REM;麻醉:镇静但有反应),以及意识体验明显降低的状态(睡眠:N2/N3;麻醉:无反应)。在这里,我们检验了以下两个假设:(1)当进入意识降低状态时,皮层连接将发生明显变化;(2)这些变化在睡眠和麻醉中具有相似水平的意识觉醒状态下是相似的。我们使用来自五名成年神经外科患者的颅内记录,在自然睡眠期间(觉醒状态 WS、N1、N2、N3、REM)和丙泊酚麻醉期间(用药前觉醒 WA、镇静/有反应 S 和无反应 U),比较了同一受试者在不同觉醒状态下的静息状态皮层功能连接(用加权相位滞后指数 wPLI 测量)。分析表明,在睡眠和麻醉中,存在一个区分维持和降低意识体验的状态的过渡边界。在觉醒状态 WS 和 WA 下,颞叶内的 alpha 频带 wPLI 占主导地位。在 N1、REM 和 S 中,这种模式基本不变。进入意识降低状态 N2、N3 和 U 时,连接发生了剧烈变化,主导连接转移到前额叶皮层。进一步分析表明,在睡眠和麻醉中,皮层连接的重组具有相似性。从颞叶到额叶皮层的连接转移可能反映了在意识降低状态下感觉处理受损。这些数据表明,功能连接可以作为觉醒状态的生物标志物,并表明睡眠和麻醉中 LOC 的共同机制。