Anesthesia Clinical Trial
Official title:
Arousal Pathways and Emergence From Sedation
Emergence from sedation involves an increase in both the level of consciousness and arousal.
Some insight to the neural core of consciousness was gained in the recent past. Our research
objective is to characterize for the first time the spatiotemporal mobilization of the
ascending reticular activating system during emergence from sedation; stated otherwise - to
capture the neural core of arousal.
To achieve this objective we plan to utilize the advanced imaging modality of EEG-fMRI. In
short, volunteers will be placed in the MRI. Following baseline recordings they will be
sedated with a continuous drip of propofol, titrated to deep sedation. Once in that sedation
level, propofol administration will cease until emerging to an awake-calm/light sedation.
Continuous EEG recordings and fMRI scans will be taken, both task specific (auditory
oddball) and resting-fMRI. Analyses will focus (but will not be restricted to) on
constituents of the ascending reticular activating system.
The expected advances of this proposal are:
1. Emergence from sedation (and anesthesia) is one of the critical stages and least
elucidated area in the practice of anesthesia. Delayed awakening of varying degree is
not uncommon after anesthesia and may have a number of different causes, individual or
combined, which may be both drug or non-drug related, thus causing a diagnostic
dilemma. Eventually - better insight into this subject will lead to better clinical
practice and better understanding why patients emerge in such a diverse and sometimes
unexpected manner.
2. Knowledge of the internal structure underlying arousal from anesthesia will help
develop / upgrade brain monitors that could tell the anesthesiologist the patient's
level of consciousness and prediction of arousal.
3. A detailed reproducible mapping of the arousal process may serve as the core of a drug
screening platform for drugs that may expedite patient arousal.
4. Elucidation of the arousal paradigm from sedation will enhance our knowledge of
physiological sleep.
Research hypothesis
Return of consciousness is a complex phenomenon comprising of interplay between the cortex
and deeper brain structures. We hypothesize that the activation signature is conserved and
similar between subjects. Furthermore, we hypothesize that inter-subject variability will
arise mainly in the time domain, as evident from the clinical observation of variable time
to emergence in different patients.
Sedation and general anesthesia are at the hub of modern medicine. The practice of the
administration of anesthesia and sedation has evolved considerably and is now considered
safe and reproducible. Still, one of the critical parts of anesthesia practice is the
emergence: with the phenomenological variability of the clinical presentations of emergence,
and its increased inherent risks of airway patency, insufficient respiratory mechanics,
hyperreflexia and altered mental state.
Our understanding of the underlying mechanisms of sedation and anesthesia is still somewhat
lacking: The body of evidence concerning induction and maintenance is more evolved[1-4],
whereas the most profound gaps of knowledge concern emergence.
While anesthetic agent exert a global effect on the brain, it is clear that some foci are
more sensitive[5] and more relevant to the achievement of the anesthetic goals of hypnosis,
amnesia, and reduced responsiveness.
Mechanisms of unconsciousness induced by general anesthesia[1] can be broadly dissected to
two elements: consciousness and arousal: Current consciousness theories[6,7] ascribe to
consciousness the ability to experience. To achieve that goal, information complexity and
information integration are paramount. These faculties reside mainly in the neocortex.
Arousal on the other hand, resides mainly in the thalamus, hypothalamus, midbrain and pons
with the neural machinery of physiological sleep[8,9]. We tend to associate consciousness
with arousability. Dreaming however - is a straightforward example of consciousness without
arousal.
A given level of arousal is the output of the balance of the mutual inhibition between the
sleep promoting locus - the ventrolateral preoptic nucleus - and the multiple arousal loci,
commonly known as the ARAS (Ascending Reticular Activating System)[10,11]. Shortly, this
dispersed system is comprised of multiple nuclei with different neurotransmitters. Some of
the nuclei have thalamic projections and some are extra-thalamic with direct and diverse
cortical projections. The transition between sleep and wakefulness is further enhanced by
the Orexigenic neurons in the hypothalamus[12,13], which serve as a flip flop mechanism.
The research into consciousness has made some progress[14] using anesthetic approaches and
most specifically, emergence from sedation and anesthesia, to describe the neural core of
consciousness. Recently, publications by Purdon et al.[15,16] identified an EEG signature of
consciousness transition state.
The body of evidence concerning arousal pathways is less formidable, possibly due to the
dispersed array of nuclei, and their "deep" subcortical locations, complicating their
evaluation in less invasive methods (such as scalp EEG). The classic research tool of this
field is lesions studies (both in animal models and unfortunate patients)[17,18] in discrete
loci with an observed change in sleep-wake physiology. Recently, pioneering ex vivo (rat
pups midbrain slices) research by Garcia-rill and Charlesworth[19], using intracellular
recordings provided compelling data supporting electrical coupling and coherence of neurons
within nuclei of the ARAS. However, to the best of our knowledge to this date there has been
no explicit trial to capture or characterize the dynamic changes in the ARAS of human
subjects emerging from sedation.
Research objectives
1. To characterize the spatiotemporal signature sequence of the arousing brain, focusing
(but not restricted to) on deep brain structures. Arousal signature may include the
following:
- A conserved sequence of brain structures mobilization.
- Summation of foci activations (without an explicit order).
- Hierarchy between different loci (cholinergic vs. monoaminic components of the
ARAS).
2. To identify a reproducible signal heralding imminent return of consciousness.
Methods:
The proposed study has been submitted to the Institutional Review Board committee for
approval.
Experiment summary:
The proposed study is an interventional, single center study, conducted on 20 volunteers. A
sample size of 20 was chosen in light of the relatively low signal to noise ratio inherent
to fMRI imaging. subjects will be healthy males age 20-40, who are not taking chronic
medications or using illicit drugs. All subjects, after signing the informed consent form,
will fill a standard MRI questionnaire for the detection of metallic implants and will
undergo medical evaluation and examination by the anesthesiologist. During the study period
volunteers will be monitored by non invasive standard patient ASA monitoring: ECG, blood
pressure, pulse oximetry, and exhaled CO2 levels. Each subject will be connected to an EEG
recording cap, and will be placed in the magnet. Baseline recordings of EEG, MRI and fMRI
will be taken. Then sedation will be induced with continuous IV propofol infusion with a
Target Controlled Infusion pump - TCI, using the Marsh model[14,20,21]. Depth of sedation
will be titrated to deep sedation (Ramsay scale 5)[22]. Subsequently, propofol
administration will be discontinued, and continuous EEG and fMRI recordings will be taken
until emerging from sedation to an awake calm/light sedation (Ramsay 2-3), as verified by a
response to the subject's given name. At this point EEG monitoring and fMRI scans will
cease. The subject will be helped out of the magnet and transferred to a post anesthesia
care unit (PACU).
All subjects will be monitored until reaching discharge criteria ascertained by an
examination performed by an anesthesiologist.
Brain monitoring
1. Functional Magnetic Resonance (fMRI): brain BOLD fMRI - blood oxygen level dependent
fMRI - harnessing the magnetic properties of the ferric ion of hemoglobin to image
changes in blood flow to metabolically active brain loci. The underlying assumption of
the imaging modality (similar to Positron Emission Tomography) is the metabolic
coupling of cellular activity and blood flow. Analyses will focus but will not be
restricted to subthalamic structures involved in the RAS.
2. EEG (electroencephalogram), while in the MRI - EEG-fMRI. Combining the superior
temporal resolution of the EEG with the localizing resolution of the MRI. The EEG will
serve as an adjunct to the level of sedation and as source for data concerning
thalamocortical pathways or arousal.
Expected results:
The results from this research project may help improve patient safety through the
prediction of his/her arousal status. Anesthesia/Arousal level monitors have yet to prove
their contribution to patient safety. Integration of deep brain structures data may prove to
be the missing link to improving monitors' performance. Additionally, a thorough
understanding of the arousal process can potentially help develop agents to hasten arousal,
as it may serve as a screening paradigm for known pharmaceuticals (expanding their clinical
indications) as well as new chemical entities (NCEs).
Feasibility and perceived strengths:
The feasibility of the proposed research project is very high. The project will be performed
in Tel Aviv Medical Center in the Wohl Center for Advanced Imaging. The Wohl Center involves
a prominent neuroscience research group with a significant number of publications related to
emotional and cognitive processing in health and disease. Some of these studies include
volunteers[23,24] and the use of fMRI and EEG to follow propofol induced sedation[25,26].
The proposed project will enjoy a full collaboration with the research center. In this
light, the completion of the proposed imaging sessions and their subsequent analyses is
realistic.
A thorough characterization of the emergence process warrants careful, dedicated attention
to deep brain structures while designing the experiment throughout its execution and during
analyses. As stand-alone scalp EEG recordings have fallen short of finding the "emergence
fingerprint" (as EEG signal represent mostly cortical activity) we contest that a combined
EEG-fMRI carries more hopes for the characterization of emergence from sedation.
;
Endpoint Classification: Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Single Group Assignment, Masking: Open Label, Primary Purpose: Basic Science
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