Journal
BRITISH JOURNAL OF ANAESTHESIA
Volume 84, Issue 1, Pages 33-37Publisher
PROF SCI PUBL
DOI: 10.1093/oxfordjournals.bja.a013378
Keywords
anaesthesia, depth; anaesthetic techniques, inhalation; anaesthetics volatile, isoflurane; monitoring, electroencephalography; monitoring, bispectral index
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We have studied the effects of increases in isoflurane concentration on the EEG bispectral index (BIS) in 70 patients anaesthetized with isoflurane-nitrous oxide-sufentanil for major abdominal surgery. During surgery, baseline BIS was recorded at 0.8% end-tidal isoflurane with nitrous oxide in oxygen (FIO2 0.35). After this, end-tidal isoflurane was increased to 1.6% for 15 min and decreased subsequently to 0.8% for 20 min to assess recovery. In 20 patients, BIS decreased from a mean value of 40 (SD 9) during baseline to 25 (10) at 1.6% isoflurane. In contrast, BIS did not change in 23 patients and increased in 27 patients from 35 (6) to 46 (8) as isoflurane was increased to 1.6%. In all patients, BIS recovered to baseline values at 0.8% isoflurane. The changes in BIS with increasing isoflurane concentration were not related to drugs or differences in physiological variables, which did not differ between groups. Patients with a decrease in BIS were significantly younger (38 (range 18-68) yr) than those with unchanged (55 (26-70) yr) or increased (60 (40-70) yr) BIS values (P < 0.001). It is possible that the paradoxical increase in BIS is related to continuous pre-burst EEG patterns consisting of high-frequency activity. This suggests that the use of BIS as a guide for isoflurane administration may be misleading in some patients undergoing surgical procedures.
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