Responsiveness variability during anaesthesia relates to inherent differences in brain structure and function of the frontoparietal networks
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Published:2023-01-08
Issue:6
Volume:44
Page:2142-2157
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ISSN:1065-9471
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Container-title:Human Brain Mapping
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language:en
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Short-container-title:Human Brain Mapping
Author:
Deng Feng1ORCID,
Taylor Nicola1,
Owen Adrian M.23,
Cusack Rhodri1,
Naci Lorina14ORCID
Affiliation:
1. Trinity College Institute of Neuroscience, School of Psychology Trinity College Dublin Dublin Ireland
2. Brain and Mind Institute Western University London Canada
3. Department of Physiology and Pharmacology and Department of Psychology Western University London Canada
4. Global Brain Health Institute Trinity College Dublin Dublin Ireland
Abstract
AbstractAnaesthesia combined with functional neuroimaging provides a powerful approach for understanding the brain mechanisms of consciousness. Although propofol is used ubiquitously in clinical interventions that reversibly suppress consciousness, it shows large inter‐individual variability, and the brain bases of this variability remain poorly understood. We asked whether three networks key to conscious cognition—the dorsal attention (DAN), executive control (ECN), and default mode (DMN)—underlie responsiveness variability under anaesthesia. Healthy participants (N = 17) were moderately anaesthetized during narrative understanding and resting‐state conditions inside the Magnetic Resonance Imaging scanner. A target detection task measured behavioural responsiveness. An independent behavioural study (N = 25) qualified the attention demands of narrative understanding. Then, 30% of participants were unaffected in their response times, thus thwarting a key aim of anaesthesia—the suppression of behavioural responsiveness. Individuals with stronger functional connectivity within the DAN and ECN, between them, and to the DMN, and with larger grey matter volume in frontal regions were more resilient to anaesthesia. For the first time, we show that responsiveness variability during propofol anaesthesia relates to inherent differences in brain structure and function of the frontoparietal networks, which can be predicted prior to sedation. Results highlight novel markers for improving awareness monitoring during clinical anaesthesia.
Funder
Canada Excellence Research Chairs, Government of Canada
Canadian Institute for Advanced Research
Canadian Institutes of Health Research
Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada
Subject
Neurology (clinical),Neurology,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging,Radiological and Ultrasound Technology,Anatomy
Cited by
1 articles.
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