Identifying Recall Under Sedation by a Novel EEG Based Index of Attention-A Pilot Study

Recall is an accepted consequence of sedation. But due to the very low prevalence of the more devastating awareness under anesthesia (AUA), it might be of value to assess first the efficacy of new markers for AUA by their efficacy in discovering the more prevalent recall under sedation (RUS). In thi...

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Veröffentlicht in:Frontiers in medicine 2022-04, Vol.9, p.880384-880384
Hauptverfasser: Baron Shahaf, Dana, Weissman, Avi, Priven, Leonid, Shahaf, Goded
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Recall is an accepted consequence of sedation. But due to the very low prevalence of the more devastating awareness under anesthesia (AUA), it might be of value to assess first the efficacy of new markers for AUA by their efficacy in discovering the more prevalent recall under sedation (RUS). In this pilot study we assessed whether a novel index for attentional effort, the cognitive effort index (CEI), derived in real-time from one forehead EEG channel, could differentiate between patients with or without RUS. EEG was sampled from 2 groups: (1) Patients who underwent deep sedation ( = 25) (using drugs according to the anesthesiologist preference, but generally combining either Midazolam or Propofol together with either Fentanyl or Remifentanil). (2) Patients who underwent general anesthesia (GA, = 13, a negative control for recall). In recovery, recall was assessed using the BRICE questionnaire. Of the 25 sedated patients, 11 experienced recall. The CEI marker was high during significantly longer periods in patients with recall, compared to sedated patients, or patients under GA, without recall. Moreover, the increase in CEI was evident mainly toward the end of the procedure. RUS seems to associate with higher level of attention, which is identified in real-time by the easy-to-extract CEI marker.
ISSN:2296-858X
2296-858X
DOI:10.3389/fmed.2022.880384