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Anesthesia alters complexity of spontaneous and stimulus-related neuronal firing patterns in rat visual cortex. | LitMetric

Anesthesia alters complexity of spontaneous and stimulus-related neuronal firing patterns in rat visual cortex.

Neuroscience

Center for Consciousness Science, Department of Anesthesiology, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI, USA. Electronic address:

Published: December 2024

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study examines how the firing patterns of neurons in the primary visual cortex of rats change under different levels of general anesthesia, particularly focusing on spontaneous brain state changes.
  • Five distinct neuronal population states were identified that transitioned dynamically, irrespective of the anesthetic concentration, during both resting and visual stimulation.
  • Although one state in deep anesthesia showed increased neuronal activity akin to awake conditions, overall low neuronal complexity suggested disrupted sensory processing and unconsciousness.

Article Abstract

Complexity of neuronal firing patterns may serve as an indicator of sensory information processing across different states of consciousness. Recent studies have shown that spontaneous changes in brain states can occur during general anesthesia, which may influence neuronal complexity and the state of consciousness. In this study, we investigated how the firing patterns of cortical neurons, both at rest and during visual stimulation, are affected by spontaneously changing brain states under varying levels of anesthesia. Extracellular unit activity was measured in the primary visual cortex of unrestrained rats as the inhaled concentration of desflurane was incrementally reduced to 6%, 4%, 2%, and 0%. Using dimensionality reduction and density-based clustering on individual unit activities, we identified five distinct population states, which underwent dynamic transitions independent of the anesthetic level during both resting and stimulus conditions. One population state that occurred mainly in deep anesthesia exhibited a paradoxically increased number of active neurons and asynchronous spiking, suggesting a spontaneous reversal towards an awake-like condition. However, this was contradicted by the observation of low neuronal complexity in both spontaneous and stimulus-related spike activity, which more closely aligns with unconsciousness. Our findings reveal that transient neuronal states with distinct spiking patterns can emerge in visual cortex at constant anesthetic concentrations. The reduced complexity in states associated with deep anesthesia likely indicates a disruption of conscious sensory information processing.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.neuroscience.2024.11.076DOI Listing

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