Subanaesthetic ketamine and altered states of consciousness in humans
British Journal of Anaesthesia April 13, 2018 Phillip E. Vlisides, Tarik Bel‐bahar, Amanda Nelson et al. 117 citations
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ISSN 0007-0912
2 papers in the library · 152 citations · publishing 2018
British Journal of Anaesthesia April 13, 2018 Phillip E. Vlisides, Tarik Bel‐bahar, Amanda Nelson et al. 117 citations
No Summary
British Journal of Anaesthesia February 4, 2018 Jamie Sleigh, Catherine E. Warnaby, Irene Tracey 35 citations
Selfhood depends on brain processes that allow a person to experience being a distinct, capable agent. It includes a hierarchy of components: core self (awareness of existence), embodied self (sentience), executive self (agency), and higher-order cognition. Consciousness and selfhood are related but not identical; understanding selfhood helps explain partial consciousness during anesthesia. Brain-imaging and EEG studies show that anesthetic drugs selectively impair self-related networks, especially the anterior insula and salience network, causing depersonalization at moderate doses while preserving disembodied self-awareness. Unlike natural sleep, where loss of agency and sentience tracks with decreasing self-awareness, anesthesia maintains posterior brain connectivity even at high concentrations, possibly marking a core self involved in reduced energy homeostasis.