Skip to content

J. F. Brichant

1 paper in the library · 359 citations · publishing 2019

Papers

The spectral exponent of the resting EEG indexes the presence of consciousness during unresponsiveness induced by propofol, xenon, and ketamine

NeuroImage January 11, 2019 Michele Colombo, Martino Napolitani, Mélanie Boly et al. 359 citations

During anesthesia, people may still be conscious even though they do not respond. A marker of consciousness based on the decay rate of the power spectral density (PSD) of resting EEG—measured by the spectral exponent β—was tested in healthy participants under xenon, propofol, or ketamine anesthesia (n=5 per group). Delayed reports indicated whether consciousness was present or absent. Xenon and propofol, which abolish consciousness, caused a steeper PSD decay (more negative β) compared to wakefulness. Ketamine, which preserves consciousness, showed a PSD decay similar to wakefulness overall but a flattening in high frequencies (20–40 Hz). The spectral exponent correlated strongly with the Perturbational Complexity Index (PCI), supporting its use as a marker of consciousness.