Author:
Guo Fengru,Li Yuqin,Jian Zhaoxin,Cui Yan,Gong Wenhui,Li Airui,Jing Wei,Xu Peng,Chen Ke,Guo Daqing,Yao Dezhong,Xia Yang
Abstract
Abstract
Background
The anesthetic states are accompanied by functional alterations. However, the dose-related adaptive alterations in the higher-order network under anesthesia, e. g. default mode network (DMN), are poorly revealed.
Methods
We implanted electrodes in brain regions of the rat DMN to acquire local field potentials to investigate the perturbations produced by anesthesia. Relative power spectral density, static functional connectivity (FC), fuzzy entropy of dynamic FC, and topological features were computed from the data.
Results
The results showed that adaptive reconstruction was induced by isoflurane, exhibiting reduced static and stable long-range FC, and altered topological features. These reconstruction patterns were in a dose-related fashion.
Conclusion
These results might impart insights into the neural network mechanisms underlying anesthesia and suggest the potential of monitoring the depth of anesthesia based on the parameters of DMN.
Funder
National Natural Science Foundation of China
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Subject
Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine