Jones Keith G, Lybbert Carter, Euler Matthew J, Huang Jason, Lunt Seth, Richards Sindhu V, Jessop Jacob E, Larson Adam, Odell David H, Kuck Kai, Tadler Scott C, Mickey Brian J
Interdepartmental Program in Neuroscience, The University of Utah, Salt Lake City, UT, United States.
Department of Psychiatry, Huntsman Mental Health Institute, The University of Utah, Salt Lake City, UT, United States.
Front Syst Neurosci. 2023 Jun 15;17:1172856. doi: 10.3389/fnsys.2023.1172856. eCollection 2023.
Burst suppression is a brain state consisting of high-amplitude electrical activity alternating with periods of quieter suppression that can be brought about by disease or by certain anesthetics. Although burst suppression has been studied for decades, few studies have investigated the diverse manifestations of this state within and between human subjects. As part of a clinical trial examining the antidepressant effects of propofol, we gathered burst suppression electroencephalographic (EEG) data from 114 propofol infusions across 21 human subjects with treatment-resistant depression. This data was examined with the objective of describing and quantifying electrical signal diversity. We observed three types of EEG burst activity: canonical broadband bursts (as frequently described in the literature), spindles (narrow-band oscillations reminiscent of sleep spindles), and a new feature that we call low-frequency bursts (LFBs), which are brief deflections of mainly sub-3-Hz power. These three features were distinct in both the time and frequency domains and their occurrence differed significantly across subjects, with some subjects showing many LFBs or spindles and others showing very few. Spectral-power makeup of each feature was also significantly different across subjects. In a subset of nine participants with high-density EEG recordings, we noted that each feature had a unique spatial pattern of amplitude and polarity when measured across the scalp. Finally, we observed that the Bispectral Index Monitor, a commonly used clinical EEG monitor, does not account for the diversity of EEG features when processing the burst suppression state. Overall, this study describes and quantifies variation in the burst suppression EEG state across subjects and repeated infusions of propofol. These findings have implications for the understanding of brain activity under anesthesia and for individualized dosing of anesthetic drugs.
爆发抑制是一种脑电状态,由高振幅电活动与较安静的抑制期交替组成,可由疾病或某些麻醉剂引起。尽管对爆发抑制的研究已有数十年,但很少有研究调查这种状态在人类个体内部和个体之间的多种表现形式。作为一项研究丙泊酚抗抑郁作用的临床试验的一部分,我们收集了21名难治性抑郁症患者接受114次丙泊酚输注时的爆发抑制脑电图(EEG)数据。对这些数据进行检查的目的是描述和量化电信号的多样性。我们观察到三种类型的脑电爆发活动:典型宽带爆发(如文献中常见描述)、纺锤波(类似于睡眠纺锤波的窄带振荡)以及一种我们称为低频爆发(LFBs)的新特征,即主要是低于3赫兹功率的短暂偏转。这三种特征在时域和频域均有明显区别,且其出现情况在不同个体间差异显著,有些个体出现许多低频爆发或纺锤波,而另一些个体则很少出现。每个特征的频谱功率构成在不同个体间也有显著差异。在9名进行高密度脑电图记录的参与者子集中,我们注意到当在头皮上进行测量时,每个特征都有独特的振幅和极性空间模式。最后,我们观察到,常用的临床脑电图监测仪双谱指数监测仪在处理爆发抑制状态时并未考虑脑电特征的多样性。总体而言,本研究描述并量化了不同个体以及丙泊酚重复输注时爆发抑制脑电图状态的变化。这些发现对于理解麻醉状态下的脑活动以及麻醉药物的个体化给药具有重要意义。