2012
DOI: 10.1089/brain.2012.0107
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General Anesthesia and Human Brain Connectivity

Abstract: General anesthesia consists of amnesia, hypnosis, analgesia, and areflexia. Of these, the mechanism of hypnosis, or loss of consciousness, has been the most elusive, yet a fascinating problem. How anesthetic agents suppress human consciousness has been investigated with neuroimaging for two decades. Anesthetics substantially reduce the global cerebral metabolic rate and blood flow with a degree of regional heterogeneity characteristic to the anesthetic agent. The thalamus appears to be a common site of modulat… Show more

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Cited by 229 publications
(223 citation statements)
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References 99 publications
(99 reference statements)
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“…Indeed, there is evidence of residual conscious awareness in patients with severe cortical damage who are otherwise unresponsive to the world, suggesting that preserved subcortical structures may continue to support subjective experience (23,24). Although the mechanism of anesthetic action is still debated (25), there is increasing evidence that the effect of anesthetics depends on the disconnection of cortical circuits from subcortical structures rather than on their direct cortical activity (26,27). Anesthetics (28) or electrical stimulation (19), which affect cortical midline structures without affecting subcortical structures, do not abolish consciousness; they instead produce unresponsive but conscious dreamlike states.…”
Section: Subjective Experience and The Vertebrate Midbrainmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Indeed, there is evidence of residual conscious awareness in patients with severe cortical damage who are otherwise unresponsive to the world, suggesting that preserved subcortical structures may continue to support subjective experience (23,24). Although the mechanism of anesthetic action is still debated (25), there is increasing evidence that the effect of anesthetics depends on the disconnection of cortical circuits from subcortical structures rather than on their direct cortical activity (26,27). Anesthetics (28) or electrical stimulation (19), which affect cortical midline structures without affecting subcortical structures, do not abolish consciousness; they instead produce unresponsive but conscious dreamlike states.…”
Section: Subjective Experience and The Vertebrate Midbrainmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Top-down cortico-centric proposals are based on the idea that anesthetics disrupt the cortical processing of incoming sensory information [7][8][9][10] , particularly impairing its capacity to represent complex information and/or integrate information across distributed cortical regions [11] .…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Interestingly, some anaesthetics, at high concentrations, start to break up mitochondrial networks [115]; this would clearly alter the EM field pattern within the cell. During anaesthesia, the brains energy consumption drops dramatically from 30-70% [116]. This would suggest that electron flow in the brain is dramatically reduced and thus its ability to maintain electric fields.…”
Section: Advanced Intelligence and Electro-magnetic Fields; A Role Fomentioning
confidence: 99%