Understanding the neurophysiological changes that occur during loss and recovery of consciousness is a fundamental aim in neuroscience and has marked clinical relevance. Here, we utilize multimodal magnetic resonance neuroimaging to investigate changes in regional network connectivity and neurovascular dynamics as the brain transitions from wakefulness to dexmedetomidine-induced unconsciousness, and finally into early-stage recovery of consciousness. We observed widespread decreases in functional connectivity strength across the whole brain, and targeted increases in structure-function coupling (SFC) across select networks-especially the cerebellum-as individuals transitioned from wakefulness to hypnosis.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInt Immunopharmacol
November 2024
Background: While a number of anesthetics has been shown potentially associated with neurotoxicity in the developing brain, dexmedetomidine, a drug that was rather recently introduced into the perioperative setting, is considered beneficial from neurological wellbeing. However, the underlying mechanism of how dexmedetomidine affects brain health remains to be determined. Based on our recent study, we hypothesized that dexmedetomidine would directly bind to and inhibit Toll-like receptor 4 (TLR4), a critical receptor largely expressed in microglia and responsible for neurological insult.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBuilding on their known ability to influence sleep and arousal, Li and colleagues show that modulating the activity of glutamatergic pedunculopontine tegmental neurones also alters sevoflurane-induced hypnosis. This finding adds support for the shared sleep-anaesthesia circuit hypothesis. However, the expanding recognition of many neuronal clusters capable of modulating anaesthetic hypnosis raises the question of how disparate and anatomically distant sites ultimately interact to coordinate global changes in the state of the brain.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFunctional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) is increasingly used to non-invasively study the acute impact of psychedelics on the human brain. While fMRI is a promising tool for measuring brain function in response to psychedelics, it also has known methodological challenges. We conducted a systematic review of fMRI studies examining acute responses to experimentally administered psychedelics in order to identify convergent findings and characterize heterogeneity in the literature.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPhotoaffinity ligands are best known as tools used to identify the specific binding sites of drugs to their molecular targets. However, photoaffinity ligands have the potential to further define critical neuroanatomic targets of drug action. In the brains of WT male mice, we demonstrate the feasibility of using photoaffinity ligands to prolong anesthesia via targeted yet spatially restricted photoadduction of azi--propofol (aziPm), a photoreactive analog of the general anesthetic propofol.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPrevious studies have demonstrated that the brain has an intrinsic resistance to changes in arousal state. This resistance is most easily measured at the population level in the setting of general anesthesia and has been termed neural inertia. To date, no study has attempted to determine neural inertia in individuals.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFUnderstanding how the brain recovers from unconsciousness can inform neurobiological theories of consciousness and guide clinical investigation. To address this question, we conducted a multicenter study of 60 healthy humans, half of whom received general anesthesia for 3 hr and half of whom served as awake controls. We administered a battery of neurocognitive tests and recorded electroencephalography to assess cortical dynamics.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Recent studies point to a fundamental distinction between population-based and individual-based anaesthetic pharmacology. At the population level, anaesthetic potency is defined as the relationship between drug concentration and the likelihood of response to a stimulus. At the individual level, even when the anaesthetic concentration is held constant, fluctuations between the responsive and unresponsive states are observed.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPerioperative medicine is changing from a "protocol-based" approach to a progressively personalized care model. New molecular techniques and comprehensive perioperative medical records allow for detection of patient-specific phenotypes that may better explain, or even predict, a patient's response to perioperative stress and anesthetic care. Basic science technology has significantly evolved in recent years with the advent of powerful approaches that have translational relevance.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTraditionally, drug dosing is based on a concentration-response relationship estimated in a population. Yet, in specific individuals, decisions based on the population-level effects frequently result in over or under-dosing. Here, we interrogate the relationship between population-based and individual-based responses to anesthetics in mice and zebrafish.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAgonists at the α adrenergic receptor produce sedation, increase focus, provide analgesia, and induce centrally mediated hypotension and bradycardia, yet neither their dynamic interactions with adrenergic receptors nor their modulation of neuronal circuit activity is completely understood. Photoaffinity ligands of α adrenergic agonists have the potential both to capture discrete moments of ligand-receptor interactions and to prolong naturalistic drug effects in discrete regions of tissue in vivo. We present here the synthesis and characterization of a novel α adrenergic agonist photolabel based on the imidazole medetomidine called .
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Burst suppression occurs in the EEG during coma and under general anaesthesia. It has been assumed that burst suppression represents a deeper state of anaesthesia from which it is more difficult to recover. This has not been directly demonstrated, however.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMechanisms through which anesthetics disrupt neuronal activity are incompletely understood. In order to study anesthetic mechanisms in the intact brain, tight control over anesthetic pharmacology in a genetically and neurophysiologically accessible animal model is essential. Here, we developed a pharmacokinetic model that quantitatively describes propofol distribution into and elimination out of the brain.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInvestigation of how anesthetics produce hypnosis requires knowledge of their effects at the molecular, neuronal, circuit, and whole-brain network level. Anesthetic photolabels have long been used to explore how anesthetics bind and affect known protein targets, but they could potentially assist in investigation of anesthetic effects at higher organizational levels of the central nervous system. Here, we advocate the use and provide detailed methods for the application of anesthetic photolabels in slice electrophysiology and in intact animals as a means of investigating anesthetic effects on distinct circuits and brain centers.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe existence of a barrier between anesthetic behavioral state transitions has been observed across phyla, but demonstrating that such a barrier exists and is not a pharmacokinetic artifact has not yet been possible in humans. Such an investigation requires temporally precise information regarding the brain concentration of anesthetic in order to demonstrate the specific pharmacokinetic-pharmacodynamic mismatch that is hysteresis. We propose a method to noninvasively determine brain tissue anesthetic concentration using computerized tomography and the radiopaque gaseous anesthetic xenon.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFImportant scientific and clinical questions persist about general anesthesia despite the ubiquitous clinical use of anesthetic drugs in humans since their discovery. For example, it is not known how the brain reconstitutes consciousness and cognition after the profound functional perturbation of the anesthetized state, nor has a specific pattern of functional recovery been characterized. To date, there has been a lack of detailed investigation into rates of recovery and the potential orderly return of attention, sensorimotor function, memory, reasoning and logic, abstract thinking, and processing speed.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAdvanced electroencephalographic analysis techniques requiring high spatial resolution, including electrical source imaging and measures of network connectivity, are applicable to an expanding variety of questions in neuroscience. Performing these kinds of analyses in a rodent model requires higher electrode density than traditional screw electrodes can accomplish. While higher-density electroencephalographic montages for rodents exist, they are of limited availability to most researchers, are not robust enough for repeated experiments over an extended period of time, or are limited to use in anesthetized rodents.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIntraperitoneal injectable anesthetics are often used to achieve surgical anesthesia in laboratory mice. Because bolus redosing of injectable anesthetics can cause unacceptably high mortality, we evaluated intraperitoneal continuous-rate infusion (CRI) of ketamine with or without xylazine for maintaining surgical anesthesia for an extended period of time. Anesthesia was induced in male C57BL/6J mice by using ketamine (80 mg/kg) and xylazine (8 mg/kg) without or with acepromazine at 0.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPropofol is a widely used intravenous general anesthetic. We synthesized 2-fluoro-1,3-diisopropylbenzene, a compound that we call "fropofol", to directly assess the significance of the propofol 1-hydroxyl for pharmacologically relevant molecular recognition in vitro and for anesthetic efficacy in vivo. Compared to propofol, fropofol had a similar molecular volume and only a small increase in hydrophobicity.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFExtending a surgical plane of anesthesia in mice by using injectable anesthetics typically is accomplished by repeat-bolus dosing. We compared the safety and efficacy of redosing protocols administered either during an anesthetic surgical plane (maintaining a continuous surgical plane, CSP), or immediately after leaving this plane (interrupted surgical plane, ISP) in C57BL/6J mice. Anesthesia was induced with ketamine, xylazine, and acepromazine (80, 8, and 1 mg/kg IP, respectively), and redosing protocols included 25% (0.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: The development of novel anesthetics has historically been a process of combined serendipity and empiricism, with most recent new anesthetics developed via modification of existing anesthetic structures.
Methods: Using a novel high-throughput screen employing the fluorescent anesthetic 1-aminoanthracene and apoferritin as a surrogate for on-pathway anesthetic protein target(s), we screened a 350,000 compound library for competition with 1-aminoanthracene-apoferritin binding. Hit compounds meeting structural criteria had their binding affinities for apoferritin quantified with isothermal titration calorimetry and were tested for γ-aminobutyric acid type A receptor binding using a flunitrazepam binding assay.