AI Article Synopsis

  • Anesthetic drugs cause distinct changes in EEG patterns, but their effects on brain function are not fully understood.
  • Functional imaging technologies like PET and fMRI are crucial for studying how these drugs lead to general anesthesia.
  • This study outlines a new method to combine fMRI and EEG to better connect EEG patterns with specific brain region activities during anesthesia, while addressing technical and safety challenges.

Article Abstract

It has been long appreciated that anesthetic drugs induce stereotyped changes in electroencephalogram (EEG), but the relationships between the EEG and underlying brain function remain poorly understood. Functional imaging methods including positron emission tomography (PET) and functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI), have become important tools for studying how anesthetic drugs act in the human brain to induce the state of general anesthesia. To date, no investigation has combined functional MRI with EEG to study general anesthesia. We report here a paradigm for conducting combined fMRI and EEG studies of human subjects under general anesthesia. We discuss the several technical and safety problems that must be solved to undertake this type of multimodal functional imaging and show combined recordings from a human subject. Combined fMRI and EEG exploits simultaneously the high spatial resolution of fMRI and the high temporal resolution of EEG. In addition, combined fMRI and EEG offers a direct way to relate established EEG patterns induced by general anesthesia to changes in neural activity in specific brain regions as measured by changes in fMRI blood oxygen level dependent (BOLD) signals.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2855224PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1749-6632.2008.04119.xDOI Listing

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