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- Andria Pelentritou, Levin Kuhlmann, John Cormack, Steven Mcguigan, Will Woods, Suresh Muthukumaraswamy, and David Liley.
- From the Centre for Human Psychopharmacology (A.P., L.K., D.L.) the Centre for Mental Health (W.W.), Swinburne University of Technology, Melbourne, Australia the Faculty of Information Technology, Monash University, Melbourne, Australia (L.K.) the Department of Anaesthesia and Pain Management, St. Vincent's Hospital Melbourne, Melbourne, Australia (J.C., S.M.) the School of Pharmacy, The University of Auckland, New Zealand (S.M.) the Department of Medicine, The University of Melbourne, Parkville, Melbourne, Australia (D.L.).
- Anesthesiology. 2020 May 1; 132 (5): 1017-1033.
BackgroundInvestigations of the electrophysiology of gaseous anesthetics xenon and nitrous oxide are limited revealing inconsistent frequency-dependent alterations in spectral power and functional connectivity. Here, the authors describe the effects of sedative, equivalent, stepwise levels of xenon and nitrous oxide administration on oscillatory source power using a crossover design to investigate shared and disparate mechanisms of gaseous xenon and nitrous oxide anesthesia.MethodsTwenty-one healthy males underwent simultaneous magnetoencephalography and electroencephalography recordings. In separate sessions, sedative, equivalent subanesthetic doses of gaseous anesthetic agents nitrous oxide and xenon (0.25, 0.50, and 0.75 equivalent minimum alveolar concentration-awake [MACawake]) and 1.30 MACawake xenon (for loss of responsiveness) were administered. Source power in various frequency bands were computed and statistically assessed relative to a conscious/pre-gas baseline.ResultsObserved changes in spectral-band power (P < 0.005) were found to depend not only on the gas delivered, but also on the recording modality. While xenon was found to increase low-frequency band power only at loss of responsiveness in both source-reconstructed magnetoencephalographic (delta, 208.3%, 95% CI [135.7, 281.0%]; theta, 107.4%, 95% CI [63.5, 151.4%]) and electroencephalographic recordings (delta, 260.3%, 95% CI [225.7, 294.9%]; theta, 116.3%, 95% CI [72.6, 160.0%]), nitrous oxide only produced significant magnetoencephalographic high-frequency band increases (low gamma, 46.3%, 95% CI [34.6, 57.9%]; high gamma, 45.7%, 95% CI [34.5, 56.8%]). Nitrous oxide-not xenon-produced consistent topologic (frontal) magnetoencephalographic reductions in alpha power at 0.75 MACawake doses (44.4%; 95% CI [-50.1, -38.6%]), whereas electroencephalographically nitrous oxide produced maximal reductions in alpha power at submaximal levels (0.50 MACawake, -44.0%; 95% CI [-48.1,-40.0%]).ConclusionsElectromagnetic source-level imaging revealed widespread power changes in xenon and nitrous oxide anesthesia, but failed to reveal clear universal features of action for these two gaseous anesthetics. Magnetoencephalographic and electroencephalographic power changes showed notable differences which will need to be taken into account to ensure the accurate monitoring of brain state during anaesthesia.
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