Brain Signaling Group, Department of Molecular Medicine, University of Oslo, Oslo, Norway.
Department of Anaesthesia, and Intervention Centre, Oslo University Hospital, Oslo, Norway.
PLoS One. 2020 Nov 23;15(11):e0242056. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0242056. eCollection 2020.
How and to what extent electrical brain activity reflects pharmacologically altered states and contents of consciousness, is not well understood. Therefore, we investigated whether measures of evoked and spontaneous electroencephalographic (EEG) signal diversity are altered by sub-anaesthetic levels of ketamine compared to normal wakefulness, and how these measures relate to subjective experience. High-density 62-channel EEG was used to record spontaneous brain activity and responses evoked by transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) in 10 healthy volunteers before and during administration of sub-anaesthetic doses of ketamine in an open-label within-subject design. Evoked signal diversity was assessed using the perturbational complexity index (PCI), calculated from EEG responses to TMS perturbations. Signal diversity of spontaneous EEG, with eyes open and eyes closed, was assessed by Lempel Ziv complexity (LZc), amplitude coalition entropy (ACE), and synchrony coalition entropy (SCE). Although no significant difference was found in TMS-evoked complexity (PCI) between the sub-anaesthetic ketamine condition and normal wakefulness, all measures of spontaneous EEG signal diversity (LZc, ACE, SCE) showed significantly increased values in the sub-anaesthetic ketamine condition. This increase in signal diversity correlated with subjective assessment of altered states of consciousness. Moreover, spontaneous signal diversity was significantly higher when participants had eyes open compared to eyes closed, both during normal wakefulness and during influence of sub-anaesthetic ketamine. The results suggest that PCI and spontaneous signal diversity may reflect distinct, complementary aspects of changes in brain properties related to altered states of consciousness: the brain's capacity for information integration, assessed by PCI, might be indicative of the brain's ability to sustain consciousness, while spontaneous complexity, as measured by EEG signal diversity, may be indicative of the complexity of conscious content. Thus, sub-anaesthetic ketamine may increase the complexity of the conscious content and the brain activity underlying it, while the level or general capacity for consciousness remains largely unaffected.
大脑电活动如何以及在何种程度上反映出药理学改变的意识状态和意识内容,目前尚不清楚。因此,我们研究了亚麻醉剂量的氯胺酮与正常觉醒相比,是否会改变诱发电位和自发脑电(EEG)信号多样性的测量值,以及这些测量值与主观体验有何关系。在一项开放性、自身对照研究中,我们使用高密度 62 通道 EEG 记录了 10 名健康志愿者在亚麻醉剂量氯胺酮给药前后的自发脑活动和经颅磁刺激(TMS)诱发的反应。通过从 TMS 扰动的 EEG 反应中计算出的扰动复杂性指数(PCI)来评估诱发电位信号多样性。通过 Lempel Ziv 复杂性(LZc)、振幅联合熵(ACE)和同步联合熵(SCE)评估自发 EEG 信号多样性(睁眼和闭眼时)。尽管在亚麻醉氯胺酮状态和正常觉醒之间,TMS 诱发的复杂性(PCI)没有发现显著差异,但自发 EEG 信号多样性的所有测量值(LZc、ACE、SCE)在亚麻醉氯胺酮状态下均显示出显著增加的值。这种信号多样性的增加与意识状态改变的主观评估相关。此外,在正常觉醒和亚麻醉氯胺酮影响下,与闭眼时相比,睁眼时自发信号多样性显著增加。研究结果表明,PCI 和自发信号多样性可能反映了与意识状态改变相关的大脑属性变化的不同、互补方面:通过 PCI 评估的大脑信息整合能力可能反映了大脑维持意识的能力,而通过 EEG 信号多样性测量的自发复杂性可能反映了意识内容的复杂性。因此,亚麻醉氯胺酮可能会增加意识内容及其基础的大脑活动的复杂性,而意识的水平或总体能力基本保持不变。