Changes in Intrinsic Connectivity Networks Topology Across Levels of Dexmedetomidine-Induced Alteration of Consciousness

Author:

Staquet Cecile1234,Vanhaudenhuyse Audrey45,Kandeepan Sivayini67,Sanders Robert D.8910,Ribeiro de Paula Demetrius11,Brichant Jean François2,Laureys Steven1213,Bonhomme Vincent121011,Soddu Andrea6

Affiliation:

1. Anesthesia and Perioperative Neuroscience Laboratory, GIGA-Consciousness, Liege University, Liege, Belgium

2. Department of Anesthesia and Intensive Care Medicine, Liege University Hospital, Liege, Belgium

3. GIGA-In Vivo Imaging (CRC) Platform, GIGA-Research, Liege University, Liege, Belgium

4. Interdisciplinary Center of Algology, Liege University Hospital, Liege, Belgium

5. Sensation & Perception Research Group, GIGA-Consciousness, Liege University, Liege, Belgium

6. Department of Physics and Astronomy, Western Institute for Neuroscience, University of Western Ontario, London, Ontario, Canada

7. Department of Physics, Faculty of Applied Sciences, University of Sri Jayewardenepura, Nugegoda, Sri Lanka

8. University of Sydney, Sydney, New South Wales, Australia

9. Department of Anaesthetics, Royal Prince Alfred Hospital, Camperdown, New South Wales, Australia

10. Institute of Academic Surgery, Sydney, New South Wales, Australia

11. Donders Institute for Brain Cognition and Behaviour, Radboud University Medical Centre, Nijmegen, Netherlands

12. Coma Science Group, GIGA-Consciousness, Liege University, Liege, Belgium; and

13. Centre du Cerveau, Liege University Hospital, Liege, Belgium.

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Human consciousness is generally thought to emerge from the activity of intrinsic connectivity networks (resting-state networks [RSNs]) of the brain, which have topological characteristics including, among others, graph strength and efficiency. So far, most functional brain imaging studies in anesthetized subjects have compared wakefulness and unresponsiveness, a state considered as corresponding to unconsciousness. Sedation and general anesthesia not only produce unconsciousness but also phenomenological states of preserved mental content and perception of the environment (connected consciousness), and preserved mental content but no perception of the environment (disconnected consciousness). Unresponsiveness may be seen during unconsciousness, but also during disconnectedness. Deep dexmedetomidine sedation is frequently a state of disconnected consciousness. In this study, we were interested in characterizing the RSN topology changes across 4 different and steady-state levels of dexmedetomidine-induced alteration of consciousness, namely baseline (Awake, drug-free state), Mild sedation (drowsy, still responding), Deep sedation (unresponsive), and Recovery, with a focus on changes occurring between a connected consciousness state and an unresponsiveness state. METHODS: A functional magnetic resonance imaging database acquired in 14 healthy volunteers receiving dexmedetomidine sedation was analyzed using a method combining independent component analysis and graph theory, specifically looking at changes in connectivity strength and efficiency occurring during the 4 above-mentioned dexmedetomidine-induced altered consciousness states. RESULTS: Dexmedetomidine sedation preserves RSN architecture. Unresponsiveness during dexmedetomidine sedation is mainly characterized by a between-networks graph strength alteration and within-network efficiency alteration of lower-order sensory RSNs, while graph strength and efficiency in higher-order RSNs are relatively preserved. CONCLUSIONS: The differential dexmedetomidine-induced RSN topological changes evidenced in this study may be the signature of inadequate processing of sensory information by lower-order RSNs, and of altered communication between lower-order and higher-order networks, while the latter remain functional. If replicated in an experimental paradigm distinguishing, in unresponsive subjects, disconnected consciousness from unconsciousness, such changes would sustain the hypothesis that disconnected consciousness arises from altered information handling by lower-order sensory networks and altered communication between lower-order and higher-order networks, while the preservation of higher-order networks functioning allows for an internally generated mental content (or dream).

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

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