The Utility of Electroencephalograhy in Guiding General Anesthesia in Children.

IF 4.6 2区 医学 Q1 ANESTHESIOLOGY
Choon Looi Bong, Ian Yuan
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Traditional pediatric anesthetic dosing using pharmacokinetic estimates based on age and weight is often imprecise, frequently leading to oversedation. Intraoperative electroencephalography (EEG) allows visualization of the brain's response to anesthetic agents in real time, facilitating precise titration of anesthetic drug doses optimized for the individual child. The goal of EEG-guided anesthesia management is to maintain an optimal state of hypnosis during various stages of the procedure while minimizing hemodynamic instability and other adverse effects of anesthesia. This is especially important in children with less predictable anesthetic requirements, such as children with atypical neurodevelopment, altered levels of consciousness before anesthesia, or those receiving total intravenous anesthesia, neuromuscular blockers, or a combination of anesthetic agents with different mechanisms of actions. Children with limited cardiorespiratory reserves and those undergoing high-risk procedures such as cardiopulmonary bypass also benefit from EEG guidance as they have a narrower therapeutic window for optimal anesthetic dosing. Various processed EEG (pEEG) monitors are available for intraoperative monitoring in children. These monitors display a pEEG index based on the manufacturer's algorithm, purportedly indicating the patient's hypnotic state. Due to differences in developmental neurophysiology and EEG dynamics in children, pEEG indices may not always reliably indicate the hypnotic state, especially in neonates and infants. Learning to interpret nonproprietary EEG parameters including the raw EEG, spectral-edge frequency 95% (SEF95), and density spectral array can prevent overreliance on pEEG indices. This review provides an overview of the advantages of EEG guidance during clinical anesthesia, including potential reduction in anesthetic dosage, prevention of EEG suppression, and reduction in peri-operative adverse events. We describe the use of nonproprietary EEG parameters in guiding anesthesia in children for various clinical end points including laryngoscopy, surgical incision, and maintenance of anesthesia, as well as sedation. We illustrate these principles with various case examples commonly encountered during pediatric anesthesia. Lastly, we discuss strategies to expand intraoperative EEG monitoring in children through education and training programs, as well as advocate for further research to assess clinical outcomes associated with EEG guidance to support its routine use in clinical care.

脑电图在指导儿童全身麻醉中的实用性。
传统的小儿麻醉剂剂量根据年龄和体重进行药代动力学估算,往往不够精确,经常导致过度麻醉。术中脑电图(EEG)可实时显示大脑对麻醉剂的反应,便于精确滴定麻醉药物剂量,优化儿童个体情况。脑电图指导麻醉管理的目标是在手术的各个阶段保持最佳的催眠状态,同时尽量减少血液动力学不稳定和麻醉的其他不良反应。这对于麻醉需求不太容易预测的儿童尤为重要,例如神经发育不典型、麻醉前意识水平改变或接受全静脉麻醉、神经肌肉阻滞剂或具有不同作用机制的麻醉剂组合的儿童。心肺功能储备有限的儿童和接受心肺旁路等高风险手术的儿童也可从脑电图指导中获益,因为他们的治疗窗口较窄,无法获得最佳麻醉剂量。有多种经过处理的脑电图(pEEG)监护仪可用于儿童术中监护。这些监护仪根据制造商的算法显示 pEEG 指数,据称可显示患者的催眠状态。由于儿童神经生理学发育和 EEG 动态性的差异,pEEG 指数不一定能可靠地显示催眠状态,尤其是新生儿和婴儿。学会解释非专有的脑电图参数,包括原始脑电图、频谱边缘频率 95% (SEF95) 和密度谱阵列,可以避免过度依赖 pEEG 指数。本综述概述了临床麻醉期间脑电图引导的优势,包括可能减少麻醉剂量、防止脑电图抑制和减少围手术期不良事件。我们介绍了使用非专有脑电图参数指导儿童麻醉的各种临床终点,包括喉镜检查、手术切口、麻醉维持以及镇静。我们以儿科麻醉过程中常见的各种病例来说明这些原则。最后,我们讨论了通过教育和培训计划扩大儿童术中脑电图监测的策略,并倡导进一步研究评估与脑电图引导相关的临床结果,以支持其在临床护理中的常规使用。
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来源期刊
Anesthesia and analgesia
Anesthesia and analgesia 医学-麻醉学
CiteScore
9.90
自引率
7.00%
发文量
817
审稿时长
2 months
期刊介绍: Anesthesia & Analgesia exists for the benefit of patients under the care of health care professionals engaged in the disciplines broadly related to anesthesiology, perioperative medicine, critical care medicine, and pain medicine. The Journal furthers the care of these patients by reporting the fundamental advances in the science of these clinical disciplines and by documenting the clinical, laboratory, and administrative advances that guide therapy. Anesthesia & Analgesia seeks a balance between definitive clinical and management investigations and outstanding basic scientific reports. The Journal welcomes original manuscripts containing rigorous design and analysis, even if unusual in their approach.
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