Article Notes
Article pearls, summaries and comments.
- Intraoperative EEG accurately monitors anaesthetic depth.
- Using EEG to guide intraoperative depth may reduce both anaesthetic use and postoperative delirium.
- Reducing drug exposure and depth of anaesthesia probably has significant patient and societal benefits.
- All anaesthetists and anesthesiologists should be familiar with interpreting the raw EEG in the context of anaesthesia.
- While postoperative delirium is common in the over 65y age group (15-20%) and is associated with adverse outcomes, it is less clear that avoiding excessive depth reliably reduces postoperative delirium (some studies say yes, others...)
- Additionally, because post-op delirium is often used as (or at least inadvertently becomes) a surrogate marker for a range of adverse post-op events, then it follows that EEG monitoring should also be associated with reducing these events. This has not yet been shown.
A compelling argument that the EEG and it's derivative monitors should be 'standard of care' during anaesthesia, contrasting this with the ECG, arguably a less useful, actionable or meaningful monitor, yet has been widely considered a routine monitor for three decades.