medicalexpress | One of the great mysteries of anesthesia is how patients can be
temporarily rendered completely unresponsive during surgery and then
wake up again, with all their memories and skills intact.
A new study by Dr. Andrew Hudson, an assistant
professor of anesthesiology at the David Geffen School of Medicine at
UCLA, and colleagues provides important clues about the processes used
by structurally normal brains to navigate from unconsciousness back to
consciousness. Their findings are currently available in the early
online edition of Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
Previous research has shown that the anesthetized brain is not
"silent" under surgical levels of anesthesia but experiences certain
patterns of activity, and it spontaneously changes its activity patterns
over time, Hudson said.
For the current study, the research team recorded the brain's electrical activity
in a rodent model that had been administered the inhaled anesthesia
isoflurane by placing electrodes in several brain areas associated with
arousal and consciousness. They then slowly decreased the amount of
anesthesia, as is done with patients in the operating room, monitoring
how the electrical activity in the brain changed and looking for common
activity patterns across all the study subjects.
The researchers found that the brain activity occurred in discrete
clumps, or clusters, and that the brain did not jump between all of the
clusters uniformly.
A small number of activity patterns consistently occurred in the
anesthetized rodents, Hudson noted. The patterns depended on how much
anesthesia the subject was receiving, and the brain would jump
spontaneously from one activity pattern to another. A few activity
patterns served as "hubs" on the way back to consciousness, connecting
activity patterns consistent with deeper anesthesia to those observed
under lighter anesthesia.
"Recovery from anesthesia, is not simply the result of the anesthetic
'wearing off' but also of the brain finding its way back through a maze
of possible activity states to those that allow conscious experience,"
Hudson said. "Put simply, the brain reboots itself."
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