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Cortical Oscillations and Connectivity During Postoperative Recovery

Authors :
Mackenzie Zierau
Andrew P. Lapointe
Michael P. Puglia
Amy M. McKinney
Phillip E. Vlisides
Ka I Ip
Duan Li
Aleda Thompson
Source :
J Neurosurg Anesthesiol
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

BACKGROUND: The objective of this study was to test whether postoperative electroencephalographic biomarkers, parietal alpha power and frontal-parietal connectivity, were associated with measures of clinical recovery in adult surgical patients. METHODS: This is a secondary analysis of a prospective cohort study that analyzed intraoperative connectivity patterns in adult surgical patients (n=53). Wireless, whole-scalp electroencephalographic data were collected in the postanesthesia care unit and assessed for relevance to clinical and neurocognitive recovery. Parietal alpha power and frontal-parietal connectivity (estimated via weighted phase lag index) were tested for associations with postanesthesia care unit discharge readiness and University of Michigan Sedation Scale scores upon postoperative admission. Bivariable correlation and regression models were constructed to test for unadjusted associations, then multivariable regression models were constructed to adjust for confounding. RESULTS: Postoperative electroencephalographic patterns were characterized by a predominance of alpha parietal power and frontal-parietal connectivity. Neither relative parietal alpha power (% alpha, −0.25, 95% CI, −1.41 to 0.90; P=0.657) nor alpha frontal-parietal connectivity (weighted phase lag index, −82, 95% CI, −237 to 73; P=0.287) were associated with time until postanesthesia discharge criteria were met. Furthermore, neither alpha power (−0.03, 95% CI, −0.07 to 0.01; P=0.206) nor alpha frontal-parietal connectivity (−4.2, 95% CI, −11 to 2.6; P=0.226) were associated with sedation scores upon initial assessment. CONCLUSIONS: In a pragmatic study investigating clinically relevant endpoints of postoperative recovery, we found no correlation with surrogate measures of brain neurodynamics. These data contribute to the overall impetus of developing anesthetic-invariant and generalizable markers of brain recovery.

Details

ISSN :
15371921
Volume :
33
Issue :
1
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of neurosurgical anesthesiology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....5948b93c4aa061c6a4542a512a465a35