Differential effects of propofol anaesthesia across three amplitude-defined electroencephalographic states in sedated critically ill term neonates: An observational study.

IF 6.8 2区 医学 Q1 ANESTHESIOLOGY
European Journal of Anaesthesiology Pub Date : 2025-10-01 Epub Date: 2025-05-23 DOI:10.1097/EJA.0000000000002208
Gonzalo Boncompte, Luis I Cortínez, Alberto Toso, Ady Giordano, Francisco Cruzat, Ricardo Fuentes, Juan C Pedemonte, Victor Contreras, Daniela Biggs, Esteban Chiu, Mauricio Ibacache
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Background: The developing neonatal brain displays different electroencephalographic (EEG) responses to GABAergic anaesthetics than adults. Evidence suggests the importance of isoelectric-like activity patterns. However, markers of hypnotic depth are currently lacking for this population.

Objective: To explore potential EEG markers of propofol-induced hypnosis in sedated critically ill term neonates.

Design: Observational exploratory cohort study.

Patients: Twenty critically ill term neonates (postmenstrual age 37 to 44 weeks) undergoing intensive care and requiring anaesthesia for noncardiac surgery. Patients with perinatal asphyxia, neurological pathology, brain malformations and metabolic or haemodynamic instability were excluded.

Interventions: Frontal EEG (Sedline) was recorded before induction and during a 20-min continuous rate propofol infusion.

Main outcome measures: Depending on peak amplitude, segmented EEG signals (1 s epochs) were classified as either isoelectric (<10 μV), low-voltage 10 to 25 μV), or high-voltage (>25 μV). Propofol effects were evaluated in terms of time occupancy and spectral properties within these EEG states. Correlations between clinical variables and EEG states were explored.

Results: The EEGs of 17 neonates were analysed. Most showed periods of low-voltage (16/17, 94%) and isoelectric states (2/17, 70.5%) before anaesthesia. The time spent in these EEG states increased significantly during propofol infusion; 17/17 (100%), P  < 0.001 and 16/17 (94.1%), P  = 0.016, respectively. Propofol increased the mean [95% confidence interval (CI)] time spent in the isoelectric state per patient: 12.4 (3.3 to 21.5)% versus 28.6 (14.4 to 42.8)%, P  < 0.002. A reduced spectral power was observed across all frequency bands during low-voltage states (all P  < 0.026). Gestational age was negatively correlated with time in the isoelectric state; rho, 95% CI, -0.539 (-0.11 to -0.87), P  = 0.031.

Conclusion: Our results show that isoelectric periods are common before anaesthesia in our studied population and more frequent in patients born at earlier gestational ages. The data suggest that propofol anaesthesia increases isoelectric EEG states while also reducing the spectral power, specifically during low-voltage EEG states. Potentially, both of these EEG changes could be biomarkers of neonatal hypnosis depth in this particular critically ill subpopulation.

Trial registration: ClinicalTrials.gov identifier: NCT04904965.

异丙酚麻醉对镇静的危重足月新生儿三种振幅定义脑电图状态的不同影响:一项观察性研究。
背景:发育中的新生儿大脑对gaba能麻醉的脑电图反应与成人不同。证据表明等电活动模式的重要性。然而,催眠深度的标记目前还缺乏。目的:探讨异丙酚诱导的危重足月新生儿镇静催眠的潜在脑电图标志物。设计:观察性探索性队列研究。患者:20例危重足月新生儿(经后37 ~ 44周),接受重症监护,需要麻醉进行非心脏手术。排除围产期窒息、神经病理学、脑畸形和代谢或血流动力学不稳定的患者。干预措施:在诱导前和连续20分钟异丙酚输注期间记录额叶脑电图(Sedline)。主要观察指标:根据脑电信号的峰值幅度,将分割后的EEG信号(1 s epoch)分为等电(25 μV)。在这些脑电图状态的时间占用和频谱特性方面评估异丙酚效应。探讨临床变量与脑电图状态的相关性。结果:对17例新生儿进行脑电图分析。麻醉前大多数患者表现为低压(16/ 17,94%)和等电状态(2/ 17,70.5%)。在异丙酚输注期间,这些EEG状态的时间显著增加;结论:我们的研究结果表明,等电期在麻醉前很常见,在早孕龄出生的患者中更为常见。数据表明,异丙酚麻醉增加等电脑电图状态,同时也降低频谱功率,特别是在低压脑电图状态。潜在地,这两种脑电图变化可能是新生儿催眠深度的生物标志物,在这个特殊的危重亚群中。试验注册:ClinicalTrials.gov标识符:NCT04904965。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
6.90
自引率
11.10%
发文量
351
审稿时长
6-12 weeks
期刊介绍: The European Journal of Anaesthesiology (EJA) publishes original work of high scientific quality in the field of anaesthesiology, pain, emergency medicine and intensive care. Preference is given to experimental work or clinical observation in man, and to laboratory work of clinical relevance. The journal also publishes commissioned reviews by an authority, editorials, invited commentaries, special articles, pro and con debates, and short reports (correspondences, case reports, short reports of clinical studies).
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