AI Article Synopsis

  • The study investigates the relationship between anesthetic dreaming, anesthesia awareness, and their psychological impacts during deep sedation in patients undergoing surgery.
  • A total of 51 patients were monitored, with findings showing that 12% reported dreaming during anesthesia, while no cases of anesthesia awareness were noted.
  • The results suggest that dreaming does not affect patient satisfaction during sedation and highlight the need for psychological evaluation in patients who experience dreams.

Article Abstract

Background: Anesthetic dreaming and anesthesia awareness are well distinct phenomena. Although the incidence of intraoperative awareness is more common among patients who reported a dream after surgery, the exact correlation between the two phenomena remains an unsolved rebus. The main purpose of this study was to investigate anesthetic dreaming, anesthesia awareness and psychological consequences eventually occurred under deep sedation. Intraoperative dreaming experiences were correlated with dream features in natural sleep.

Methods: Fifty-one patients, undergoing surgical excision of fibroadenomas under a Bispectral index-guided deep sedation anesthesia with propofol target controlled infusion, were enrolled into this prospective study. Psychological assessment was performed through the State Trait Anxiety Inventory. A questionnaire was adopted to register dreaming and anesthesia awareness. Data were collected after emergence (t0), 24 hours (t1), 1 month (t2), 6 months (t3).

Results: Six patients (12%) reported anesthetic dreaming at t0 confirming the response at each subsequent evaluation. One patient (2%) confirmed dreaming during anesthesia in all, but denied it at t0. There was a high correlation between the intraoperative dream contents and the features of dreams in natural sleep. No cases of anesthesia awareness were detected. A similar level of satisfaction was observed in dreaming and no-dreaming patients.

Conclusions: Anesthetic dreaming does not seem to influence satisfaction of patients undergoing deep sedation with propofol target controlled infusion. A psychological assessment would seem to improve the evaluation of possible psychological consequences in dreamer patient.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5668036PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.18632/oncotarget.17238DOI Listing

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