4.2 Review

General Anesthesia: A Probe to Explore Consciousness

Journal

FRONTIERS IN SYSTEMS NEUROSCIENCE
Volume 13, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fnsys.2019.00036

Keywords

general anesthesia; consciousness; mechanisms; brain function; brain networks

Categories

Funding

  1. University Department of Anesthesia and Intensive Care Medicine, Centre Hospitalier Regional de la Citadelle (CHR Citadelle), Liege, Belgium
  2. Department of Anesthesia and Intensive Care Medicine, University Hospital Center of Liege (CHU Liege), Belgium
  3. GIGA-Consciousness Thematic Unit, GIGA-Research, Liege University, Liege, Belgium
  4. University Hospital of Liege
  5. Belgian National Funds for Scientific Research (FRS-FNRS)
  6. European Union [720270, 785907]
  7. Luminous project [EU-H2020-fetopen-ga686764]
  8. DOCMA project [EU-H2020-MSCA-RISE-778234]
  9. Marie Sklodowska-Curie Actions [H2020-MSCA-IF-2016-ADOC-752686]
  10. BIAL Foundation
  11. French Speaking Community Concerted Research Action [ARC 12-17/01]
  12. James McDonnell Foundation
  13. Mind Science Foundation
  14. IAP research network of the Belgian Government (Belgian Science Policy) [P7/06]
  15. European Commission
  16. Public Utility Foundation Universite Europeenne du Travail''
  17. Fondazione Europea di Ricerca Biomedica
  18. Orion Pharma
  19. Society for Anesthesia and Resuscitation of Belgium
  20. Benoit Foundation
  21. Belgian Cancer Foundation [2017-064]

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General anesthesia reversibly alters consciousness, without shutting down the brain globally. Depending on the anesthetic agent and dose, it may produce different consciousness states including a complete absence of subjective experience (unconsciousness), a conscious experience without perception of the environment (disconnected consciousness, like during dreaming), or episodes of oriented consciousness with awareness of the environment (connected consciousness). Each consciousness state may potentially be followed by explicit or implicit memories after the procedure. In this respect, anesthesia can be considered as a proxy to explore consciousness. During the recent years, progress in the exploration of brain function has allowed a better understanding of the neural correlates of consciousness, and of their alterations during anesthesia. Several changes in functional and effective between-region brain connectivity, consciousness network topology, and spatio-temporal dynamics of between-region interactions have been evidenced during anesthesia. Despite a set of effects that are common to many anesthetic agents, it is still uneasy to draw a comprehensive picture of the precise cascades during general anesthesia. Several questions remain unsolved, including the exact identification of the neural substrate of consciousness and its components, the detection of specific consciousness states in unresponsive patients and their associated memory processes, the processing of sensory information during anesthesia, the pharmacodynamic interactions between anesthetic agents, the direction-dependent hysteresis phenomenon during the transitions between consciousness states, the mechanisms of cognitive alterations that follow an anesthetic procedure, the identification of an eventual unitary mechanism of anesthesia-induced alteration of consciousness, the relationship between network effects and the biochemical or sleep-wake cycle targets of anesthetic agents, as to difficulties in between-studies comparisons. In this narrative review, we draw the picture of the current state of knowledge in anesthesia-induced unconsciousness, from insights gathered on propofol, halogenated vapors, ketamine, dexmedetomidine, benzodiazepines and xenon. We also describe how anesthesia can help understanding consciousness, we develop the above-mentioned unresolved questions, and propose tracks for future research.

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