• Neuroscience letters · Aug 2016

    Propofol anesthesia reduces Lempel-Ziv complexity of spontaneous brain activity in rats.

    • Anthony G Hudetz, Xiping Liu, Siveshigan Pillay, Melanie Boly, and Giulio Tononi.
    • Department of Anesthesiology and Center for Consciousness Science, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI, United States. Electronic address: ahudetz@med.umich.edu.
    • Neurosci. Lett. 2016 Aug 15; 628: 132-5.

    AbstractConsciousness is thought to scale with brain complexity, and it may be diminished in anesthesia. Lempel-Ziv complexity (LZC) of field potentials has been shown to be a promising measure of the level of consciousness in anesthetized human subjects, neurological patients, and across the sleep-wake states in rats. Whether this relationship holds for intrinsic networks obtained by functional brain imaging has not been tested. To fill this gap of knowledge, we estimated LZC from large-scale dynamic analysis of functional magnetic resonance images (fMRI) in conscious sedated and unconscious anesthetized rats. Blood oxygen dependent (BOLD) signals were obtained from 30-min whole-brain resting-state scans while the anesthetic propofol was infused intravenously at constant infusion rates of 20mg/kg/h (conscious sedated) and 40mg/kg/h (unconscious). Dynamic brain networks were defined at voxel level by sliding window analysis of regional homogeneity (ReHo) of the BOLD signal. From scans performed at low to high propofol dose, the LZC was significantly reduced by 110%. The results suggest that the difference in LZC between conscious sedated and anesthetized unconscious subjects is conserved in rats and this effect is detectable in large-scale brain network obtained from fMRI.Copyright © 2016 Elsevier Ireland Ltd. All rights reserved.

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