OBJECTIVE We investigated whether pre-anesthesia dynamic frontal-parietal functional connectivity was correlated with the observed interindividual differences in propofol susceptibility. METHODS Three resting-state EEG datasets were used in the study (N = 29,… Click to show full abstract
OBJECTIVE We investigated whether pre-anesthesia dynamic frontal-parietal functional connectivity was correlated with the observed interindividual differences in propofol susceptibility. METHODS Three resting-state EEG datasets were used in the study (N = 29, N = 21 and N = 20). We estimated the pre-anesthesia strength and fluctuations of frontal-parietal functional connectivity by using sliding-window analysis. Propofol served as the sole anesthetic drug, and it was administered by using a target-controlled infusion system. Individual susceptibility to propofol was assessed by the induction time, from infusion onset until a bispectral index value of 60 was reached, for subjects in dataset-1 and dataset-2, and susceptibility was assessed by behavioral data for subjects in the external dataset. RESULTS We observed in the three datasets that subjects with high susceptibility to propofol had lower pre-anesthesia strength and lower fluctuation of frontal-parietal functional connectivity than the low-susceptibility group at alpha band. Moreover, the induction time was significantly correlated with the estimated pre-anesthesia frontal-parietal functional connectivity measures. We also validated the robustness of these findings by using different window lengths in sliding-window analysis. CONCLUSIONS Subjects with weaker pre-anesthesia dynamic frontal-parietal communication are more likely to be anesthetized. SIGNIFICANCE These observations suggest that the titration procedure for propofol should consider the pre-anesthesia brain functional state.
               
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