Dreaming during Anesthesia and Anesthetic Depth in Elective Surgery Patients

Author:

Leslie Kate1,Skrzypek Hannah2,Paech Michael J.3,Kurowski Irina4,Whybrow Tracey5

Affiliation:

1. Head of Research, Department of Anaesthesia and Pain Management, Royal Melbourne Hospital. Honorary Associate Professor, Department of Pharmacology, University of Melbourne.

2. Medical Student, Department of Anaesthesia and Pain Management, Royal Melbourne Hospital.

3. Professor of Obstetric Anaesthesia, School of Medicine and Pharmacology, The University of Western Australia. Head of Research, Royal Perth Hospital, and King Edward Memorial Hospital for Women.

4. Clinical Lecturer, Department of Anaesthesia and Pain Medicine, Royal Perth Hospital.

5. Research Fellow, Department of Anaesthesia, King Edward Hospital for Women.

Abstract

Background Dreaming reported after anesthesia remains a poorly understood phenomenon. Dreaming may be related to light anesthesia and represent near-miss awareness. However, few studies have assessed the relation between dreaming and depth of anesthesia, and their results were inconclusive. Therefore, the authors tested the hypothesis that dreaming during anesthesia is associated with light anesthesia, as evidenced by higher Bispectral Index values during maintenance of anesthesia. Methods With approval, 300 consenting healthy patients, aged 18-50 yr, presenting for elective surgery requiring relaxant general anesthesia with a broad range of agents were studied. Patients were interviewed on emergence and 2-4 h postoperatively. The Bispectral Index was recorded from induction until the first interview. Dream content and form were also assessed. Results Dreaming was reported by 22% of patients on emergence. There was no difference between dreamers and nondreamers in median Bispectral Index values during maintenance (37 [23-55] vs. 38 [20-59]; P=0.68) or the time at Bispectral Index values greater than 60 (0 [0-7] vs. 0 [0-31] min; P=0.38). Dreamers tended to be younger and male, to have high home dream recall, to receive propofol maintenance or regional anesthesia, and to open their eyes sooner after surgery. Most dreams were similar to dreams of sleep and were pleasant, and the content was unrelated to surgery. Conclusions Dreaming during anesthesia is unrelated to the depth of anesthesia in almost all cases. Similarities with dreams of sleep suggest that anesthetic dreaming occurs during recovery, when patients are sedated or in a physiologic sleep state.

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

Subject

Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine

Reference39 articles.

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