• Anesthesia and analgesia · Nov 2014

    Randomized Controlled Trial

    Does Anesthetic Regimen Influence Implicit Memory During General Anesthesia?

    • Pierre-Yves Lequeux, Fidelie Hecquet, and Philippe Bredas.
    • From the Department of Anesthesiology, CHU-Tivoli, La Louviere, Belgium.
    • Anesth. Analg.. 2014 Nov 1;119(5):1174-9.

    BackgroundImplicit learning of intraoperative auditory stimuli during general anesthesia is very difficult to quantify but may require the presence of noxious stimulation. We hypothesized that an anesthetic regimen with a low dose of opioid would enhance implicit memory, while a regimen with a high dose of opioid would not.MethodsOne hundred-twenty patients were randomized into 3 groups. All patients were anesthetized with a target-controlled infusion of propofol and remifentanil, targeting a Bispectral Index (BIS) value of 50. The remifentanil effect-site concentration (in ng/mL) was always double that of propofol (in μg/mL) in the first group and half of that in the second group. Patients in these 2 groups were played a list of 20 words via headphones during surgery. The third group served as control for memory tests and was not played any word during anesthesia. BIS was recorded during word presentation.ResultsNo statistical difference was found among the 3 groups regarding 3 different memory tests although 67.5% [50.7%; 80.9%] of the patients of the high-opioid group and 72.5% [55.9%; 84.9%] of the low-opioid group had at least 1 episode of BIS >60.ConclusionsWe could not demonstrate the presence of implicit or explicit memorization under propofol-remifentanil anesthesia either with a low- or a high-dose opioid anesthetic regimen.

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