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- Jessica Schrouff, Vincent Perlbarg, Mélanie Boly, Guillaume Marrelec, Pierre Boveroux, Audrey Vanhaudenhuyse, Marie-Aurélie Bruno, Steven Laureys, Christophe Phillips, Mélanie Pélégrini-Issac, Pierre Maquet, and Habib Benali.
- Cyclotron Research Centre, University of Liège, Liège, Belgium. jschrouff@doct.ulg.ac.be
- Neuroimage. 2011 Jul 1;57(1):198-205.
AbstractConsciousness has been related to the amount of integrated information that the brain is able to generate. In this paper, we tested the hypothesis that the loss of consciousness caused by propofol anesthesia is associated with a significant reduction in the capacity of the brain to integrate information. To assess the functional structure of the whole brain, functional integration and partial correlations were computed from fMRI data acquired from 18 healthy volunteers during resting wakefulness and propofol-induced deep sedation. Total integration was significantly reduced from wakefulness to deep sedation in the whole brain as well as within and between its constituent networks (or systems). Integration was systematically reduced within each system (i.e., brain or networks), as well as between networks. However, the ventral attentional network maintained interactions with most other networks during deep sedation. Partial correlations further suggested that functional connectivity was particularly affected between parietal areas and frontal or temporal regions during deep sedation. Our findings suggest that the breakdown in brain integration is the neural correlate of the loss of consciousness induced by propofol. They stress the important role played by parietal and frontal areas in the generation of consciousness.Copyright © 2011 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
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