Pain Clinical Trial
Official title:
"Advance": Assessment for Defining Variability in Anesthesia
The present study is designed to compare prospectively whether sBIS, sEMG, or CVI
variability (brain monitoring) can be used to predict unwanted intraoperative responses
(high blood pressure, fast heart rate, tearing, etc.) to stimulation (pain) and to determine
whether these intraoperative findings are related to patient-assessed postoperative pain
scores.
The hypothesis is that increases in these variability measures are associated with increased
probability of unwanted responses. If confirmed, these variability measures may help
anesthesia providers by highlighting periods of inadequate analgesia (pain relief).
Anesthesia providers have been using processed EEG parameters (brain monitors) to assess the
depth of anesthesia for many years. The Bispectral Index (BIS®; Aspect Medical Systems,
Inc.), one such brain monitor, provides a direct measure of the hypnotic state of the
patient [1, 2]. These clinicians use the BIS value, a number ranging from 0 (very deep
anesthesia) to 100 (awake state), to help optimize anesthetic dosing. Using BIS technology,
anesthesia providers may adjust anesthesia doses to provide adequate sedation while avoiding
over sedation, resulting in faster recovery [3] and a reduced incidence of awareness with
recall [4].
While BIS technology helps anesthesia providers achieve desired levels of hypnosis, they
currently rely primarily on monitoring hemodynamic (blood pressure and heart rate),
autonomic (tearing, sweating), and somatic (moving) responses to noxious (painful)
stimulation as a means to detect potential patient arousals. Additional analgesics
(narcotics, NSAIDS) are often administered in order to suppress further response to noxious
(painful) stimulation. Several studies have shown that noxious stimulation can also affect
EEG signals, resulting in increased variability in the BIS index, suggesting that
information in EEG signals could potentially help clinicians anticipate and detect patient
response to noxious stimulation.
Ropcke et al. [5] showed that BIS values were higher with surgical stimulation than without
any stimulation. Other reports have shown that focal noxious stimuli in volunteers and
patients induce transient increases in BIS [6-9]. Many of these studies show that adding
analgesics suppresses the BIS response to noxious stimulation, and the level of suppression
achieved was related to the dose of the added drugs [6, 8, 9].
Based on these findings, it is expected that insufficient analgesia would likely result in
transient increases in BIS due to ongoing surgical stimulation, increasing the overall
variability of BIS. Recently reported findings confirm that overall variability of BIS
increased prior to and following intraoperative somatic events [10]. These reports also
identified similar increases in variability of the EMG, with the largest changes realized
from a Composite Variability Index (CVI) which combined the BIS variability (sBIS) and EMG
variability (sEMG) into a single value. Other studies have also shown an association between
these variability measures and postoperative pain scores [11, 12]. These studies showed that
sBIS, sEMG, and CVI computed over the entire surgical procedure were all higher in both
adults and children with worse postoperative pain scores. However, the reliability and
optimum method of displaying these variability scores has yet to be been determined.
The present study is designed to compare whether sBIS, sEMG, or CVI can be used to predict
unwanted intraoperative somatic responses to stimulation, and to determine whether these
values are related to patient-assessed postoperative pain scores. Our hypothesis is that
increases in these variability measures are associated with increased probability of somatic
responses. If our hypothesis is confirmed, these variability measures may help clinicians by
highlighting periods of inadequate analgesia.
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