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Perioperative Brain Function Monitoring with Electroencephalography in Horses Anesthetized with Multimodal Balanced Anesthetic Protocol Subjected to Surgeries

SIMPLE SUMMARY: This study aimed to investigate the use of electroencephalography (EEG) and EEG-derived (processed) indices for detecting brain activity changes perioperatively in 12 anesthetized adult horses subjected to various surgery. Frontal electrodes together with Sedline/Root monitor were us...

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Autores principales: Murillo, Carla, Weng, Hsin-Yi, Weil, Ann B., Kreuzer, Matthias, Ko, Jeff C.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9597736/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36290236
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ani12202851
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author Murillo, Carla
Weng, Hsin-Yi
Weil, Ann B.
Kreuzer, Matthias
Ko, Jeff C.
author_facet Murillo, Carla
Weng, Hsin-Yi
Weil, Ann B.
Kreuzer, Matthias
Ko, Jeff C.
author_sort Murillo, Carla
collection PubMed
description SIMPLE SUMMARY: This study aimed to investigate the use of electroencephalography (EEG) and EEG-derived (processed) indices for detecting brain activity changes perioperatively in 12 anesthetized adult horses subjected to various surgery. Frontal electrodes together with Sedline/Root monitor were used on these horses from soon after anesthesia induction and continued until the horse first attempted to stand in recovery. The EEG waves were characterized by low-frequency high amplitude alpha, theta, and alpha waves during the isoflurane maintenance and surgery, which is commonly observed in profound anesthesia. The processed EEG indices including Patient State Index, Burst Suppression Ratio, and 95% Spectral Edge Frequency changed significantly between the stages (induction, surgery, and recovery) of anesthesia. Collectively, the presence of the slow EEG wave activities and the presence of burst suppression implies that these horses were profoundly unconscious during the anesthesia. We concluded that the use of EEG in conjunction with traditional cardiorespiratory monitoring provides clinically relevant information about perioperative brain state changes in the anesthetized horses. ABSTRACT: This study aimed to investigate the use of electroencephalography (EEG) for detecting brain activity changes perioperatively in anesthetized horses subjected to surgery. Twelve adult horses undergoing various surgeries were evaluated after premedication with xylazine and butorphanol, induction with ketamine, midazolam, and guaifenesin, and maintenance with isoflurane. The frontal EEG electrodes were placed after the horse was intubated and mechanically ventilated. The EEG data were collected continuously from Stage (S)1—transition from induction to isoflurane maintenance, S2—during surgery, S3—early recovery before xylazine sedation (0.2 mg kg IV), and S4—recovery after xylazine sedation. The Patient State Index (PSI), (Burst) Suppression Ratio (SR), and 95% Spectral Edge Frequency (SEF(95)) were compared across the stages. The PSI was lowest in S2 (20.8 ± 2.6) and increased to 30.0 ± 27.7 (p = 0.005) in S3. The SR increased from S1 (5.5 ± 10.7%) to S3 (32.7 ± 33.8%, p = 0.0001). The spectral power analysis showed that S3 had a significantly higher content of delta wave activity (0.1–4 Hz) in the EEG and lower relative power in the 3 Hz to 15 Hz range when compared to S1 and S2. A similar result was observed in S4, but the lower power was in a narrower range, from 3 Hz to 7 Hz, which indicate profound central nervous system depression potentiated by xylazine, despite the cessation of isoflurane anesthesia. We concluded that the use of EEG provides clinically relevant information about perioperative brain state changes of the isoflurane-anesthetized horse.
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spelling pubmed-95977362022-10-27 Perioperative Brain Function Monitoring with Electroencephalography in Horses Anesthetized with Multimodal Balanced Anesthetic Protocol Subjected to Surgeries Murillo, Carla Weng, Hsin-Yi Weil, Ann B. Kreuzer, Matthias Ko, Jeff C. Animals (Basel) Article SIMPLE SUMMARY: This study aimed to investigate the use of electroencephalography (EEG) and EEG-derived (processed) indices for detecting brain activity changes perioperatively in 12 anesthetized adult horses subjected to various surgery. Frontal electrodes together with Sedline/Root monitor were used on these horses from soon after anesthesia induction and continued until the horse first attempted to stand in recovery. The EEG waves were characterized by low-frequency high amplitude alpha, theta, and alpha waves during the isoflurane maintenance and surgery, which is commonly observed in profound anesthesia. The processed EEG indices including Patient State Index, Burst Suppression Ratio, and 95% Spectral Edge Frequency changed significantly between the stages (induction, surgery, and recovery) of anesthesia. Collectively, the presence of the slow EEG wave activities and the presence of burst suppression implies that these horses were profoundly unconscious during the anesthesia. We concluded that the use of EEG in conjunction with traditional cardiorespiratory monitoring provides clinically relevant information about perioperative brain state changes in the anesthetized horses. ABSTRACT: This study aimed to investigate the use of electroencephalography (EEG) for detecting brain activity changes perioperatively in anesthetized horses subjected to surgery. Twelve adult horses undergoing various surgeries were evaluated after premedication with xylazine and butorphanol, induction with ketamine, midazolam, and guaifenesin, and maintenance with isoflurane. The frontal EEG electrodes were placed after the horse was intubated and mechanically ventilated. The EEG data were collected continuously from Stage (S)1—transition from induction to isoflurane maintenance, S2—during surgery, S3—early recovery before xylazine sedation (0.2 mg kg IV), and S4—recovery after xylazine sedation. The Patient State Index (PSI), (Burst) Suppression Ratio (SR), and 95% Spectral Edge Frequency (SEF(95)) were compared across the stages. The PSI was lowest in S2 (20.8 ± 2.6) and increased to 30.0 ± 27.7 (p = 0.005) in S3. The SR increased from S1 (5.5 ± 10.7%) to S3 (32.7 ± 33.8%, p = 0.0001). The spectral power analysis showed that S3 had a significantly higher content of delta wave activity (0.1–4 Hz) in the EEG and lower relative power in the 3 Hz to 15 Hz range when compared to S1 and S2. A similar result was observed in S4, but the lower power was in a narrower range, from 3 Hz to 7 Hz, which indicate profound central nervous system depression potentiated by xylazine, despite the cessation of isoflurane anesthesia. We concluded that the use of EEG provides clinically relevant information about perioperative brain state changes of the isoflurane-anesthetized horse. MDPI 2022-10-20 /pmc/articles/PMC9597736/ /pubmed/36290236 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ani12202851 Text en © 2022 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Murillo, Carla
Weng, Hsin-Yi
Weil, Ann B.
Kreuzer, Matthias
Ko, Jeff C.
Perioperative Brain Function Monitoring with Electroencephalography in Horses Anesthetized with Multimodal Balanced Anesthetic Protocol Subjected to Surgeries
title Perioperative Brain Function Monitoring with Electroencephalography in Horses Anesthetized with Multimodal Balanced Anesthetic Protocol Subjected to Surgeries
title_full Perioperative Brain Function Monitoring with Electroencephalography in Horses Anesthetized with Multimodal Balanced Anesthetic Protocol Subjected to Surgeries
title_fullStr Perioperative Brain Function Monitoring with Electroencephalography in Horses Anesthetized with Multimodal Balanced Anesthetic Protocol Subjected to Surgeries
title_full_unstemmed Perioperative Brain Function Monitoring with Electroencephalography in Horses Anesthetized with Multimodal Balanced Anesthetic Protocol Subjected to Surgeries
title_short Perioperative Brain Function Monitoring with Electroencephalography in Horses Anesthetized with Multimodal Balanced Anesthetic Protocol Subjected to Surgeries
title_sort perioperative brain function monitoring with electroencephalography in horses anesthetized with multimodal balanced anesthetic protocol subjected to surgeries
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9597736/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36290236
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ani12202851
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