TY - JOUR
T1 - The human burst suppression electroencephalogram of deep hypothermia
AU - Brandon Westover, M.
AU - Ching, Shi Nung
AU - Kumaraswamy, Vishakhadatta M.
AU - Akeju, Oluwaseun
AU - Pierce, Eric
AU - Cash, Sydney S.
AU - Kilbride, Ronan
AU - Brown, Emery N.
AU - Purdon, Patrick L.
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2015 International Federation of Clinical Neurophysiology.
PY - 2015/10/1
Y1 - 2015/10/1
N2 - Objective: Deep hypothermia induces 'burst suppression' (BS), an electroencephalogram pattern with low-voltage 'suppressions' alternating with high-voltage 'bursts'. Current understanding of BS comes mainly from anesthesia studies, while hypothermia-induced BS has received little study. We set out to investigate the electroencephalogram changes induced by cooling the human brain through increasing depths of BS through isoelectricity. Methods: We recorded scalp electroencephalograms from eleven patients undergoing deep hypothermia during cardiac surgery with complete circulatory arrest, and analyzed these using methods of spectral analysis. Results: Within patients, the depth of BS systematically depends on the depth of hypothermia, though responses vary between patients except at temperature extremes. With decreasing temperature, burst lengths increase, and burst amplitudes and lengths decrease, while the spectral content of bursts remains constant. Conclusions: These findings support an existing theoretical model in which the common mechanism of burst suppression across diverse etiologies is the cyclical diffuse depletion of metabolic resources, and suggest the new hypothesis of local micro-network dropout to explain decreasing burst amplitudes at lower temperatures. Significance: These results pave the way for accurate noninvasive tracking of brain metabolic state during surgical procedures under deep hypothermia, and suggest new testable predictions about the network mechanisms underlying burst suppression.
AB - Objective: Deep hypothermia induces 'burst suppression' (BS), an electroencephalogram pattern with low-voltage 'suppressions' alternating with high-voltage 'bursts'. Current understanding of BS comes mainly from anesthesia studies, while hypothermia-induced BS has received little study. We set out to investigate the electroencephalogram changes induced by cooling the human brain through increasing depths of BS through isoelectricity. Methods: We recorded scalp electroencephalograms from eleven patients undergoing deep hypothermia during cardiac surgery with complete circulatory arrest, and analyzed these using methods of spectral analysis. Results: Within patients, the depth of BS systematically depends on the depth of hypothermia, though responses vary between patients except at temperature extremes. With decreasing temperature, burst lengths increase, and burst amplitudes and lengths decrease, while the spectral content of bursts remains constant. Conclusions: These findings support an existing theoretical model in which the common mechanism of burst suppression across diverse etiologies is the cyclical diffuse depletion of metabolic resources, and suggest the new hypothesis of local micro-network dropout to explain decreasing burst amplitudes at lower temperatures. Significance: These results pave the way for accurate noninvasive tracking of brain metabolic state during surgical procedures under deep hypothermia, and suggest new testable predictions about the network mechanisms underlying burst suppression.
KW - Burst suppression
KW - Electroencephalogram
KW - Hypothermia
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=84941742029&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/j.clinph.2014.12.022
DO - 10.1016/j.clinph.2014.12.022
M3 - Article
C2 - 25649968
AN - SCOPUS:84941742029
SN - 1388-2457
VL - 126
SP - 1901
EP - 1914
JO - Clinical Neurophysiology
JF - Clinical Neurophysiology
IS - 10
ER -