Frontal electroencephalogram reveals emergence-like brain activity occurring during transition periods in cardiac surgery

Heiko A Kaiser, Marie Peus, Markus M Luedi, Friedrich Lersch, Vladimir Krejci, David Reineke, Jamie Sleigh, Darren Hight, Heiko A Kaiser, Marie Peus, Markus M Luedi, Friedrich Lersch, Vladimir Krejci, David Reineke, Jamie Sleigh, Darren Hight

Abstract

Background: Cardiac surgery has one of the highest incidences of intraoperative awareness. The periods of initiation and discontinuation of cardiopulmonary bypass could be high-risk periods. Certain frontal EEG patterns might plausibly occur with unintended intraoperative awareness. This study sought to quantify the incidence of these pre-specified patterns during cardiac surgery.

Methods: Two-channel bihemispheric frontal EEG was recorded in 1072 patients undergoing cardiac surgery as part of a prospective observational study. Spectrograms were created, and mean theta (4-7 Hz) power and peak alpha (7-17 Hz) frequency were measured in patients under general anaesthesia with isoflurane. Emergence-like EEG activity in the spectrogram during surgery was classified as an alpha peak frequency increase by 2 Hz or more, and a theta power decrease by 5 dB or more in comparison with the median pre-bypass values.

Results: Data from 1002 patients were available for analysis. Fifty-five of those patients (5.5%) showed emergence-like EEG activity at least once during surgery with a median duration of 13.2 min. These patients were younger (median age, 59 vs 67 yr; P<0.001) and the median end-tidal isoflurane concentration before cardiopulmonary bypass was higher (0.82 vs 0.75 minimum alveolar concentration [MAC]; P=0.013). There was no significant difference between those with or without emergence-like EEG activity in sex, lowest core temperature, or duration of surgery. Forty-six of these EEG changes (84%) occurred within a 1 h time window centred on separation from cardiopulmonary bypass.

Conclusion: The findings of this study suggest that approximately one in 20 patients undergoing cardiac surgery with a volatile anaesthetic agent have a sustained EEG pattern while surgery is ongoing that is often seen with emergence from general anaesthesia. Monitoring the frontal EEG during cardiopulmonary bypass may identify these events and potentially reduce the incidence of unintended awareness.

Clinical trial registration: NCT02976584.

Keywords: cardiac procedures; cardiopulmonary bypass; electroencephalography; general anaesthesia; intraoperative awareness.

Copyright © 2020 British Journal of Anaesthesia. Published by Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

Source: PubMed

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