4.5 Article

Urethane anaesthesia exhibits neurophysiological correlates of unconsciousness and is distinct from sleep

Journal

EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE
Volume -, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/ejn.15690

Keywords

anaesthesia; consciousness; NREM; REM; sleep

Categories

Funding

  1. Programa de Desarrollo de Ciencias Basicas

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Urethane, a commonly used anaesthetic in animal research, induces unconsciousness with distinct electrographic states that differ from physiological sleep. This study recorded and analysed EEGs and EMGs in rats under urethane anaesthesia and natural sleep states, finding clear signatures of unconsciousness during urethane and differences in EEG profiles compared to natural sleep.
Urethane is a general anaesthetic widely used in animal research. The state of urethane anaesthesia is unique because it alternates between macroscopically distinct electrographic states: a slow-wave state that resembles non-rapid eye movement (NREM) sleep and an activated state with features of both REM sleep and wakefulness. Although it is assumed that urethane produces unconsciousness, this has been questioned because of states of cortical activation during drug exposure. Furthermore, the similarities and differences between urethane anaesthesia and physiological sleep are still unclear. In this study, we recorded the electroencephalogram (EEG) and electromyogram in chronically prepared rats during natural sleep-wake states and during urethane anaesthesia. We subsequently analysed the power, coherence, directed connectivity and complexity of brain oscillations and found that EEG under urethane anaesthesia has clear signatures of unconsciousness, with similarities to other general anaesthetics. In addition, the EEG profile under urethane is different in comparison with natural sleep states. These results suggest that consciousness is disrupted during urethane. Furthermore, despite similarities that have led others to conclude that urethane is a model of sleep, the electrocortical traits of depressed and activated states during urethane anaesthesia differ from physiological sleep states.

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