Mechanisms of formation of brain bioelectrical activity suppression patterns under adverse effects caused by neurotoxicants
- Authors: Kostenko I.A.1, Aleksandrov M.V.1,2, Chernyi V.S.3
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Affiliations:
- Polenov Neurosurgical Institute - Branch of the Almazov National Medical Research Centre
- Institute of Toxicology of the Federal Medical and Biological Agency
- Nikiforov Russian Center of Emergency and Radiation Medicine, Ministry of Emergency Situations of the Russian Federation
- Issue: No 3 (2021)
- Pages: 35-43
- Section: Original articles
- Published: 18.07.2021
- URL: https://clinpractice.ru/0869-7922/article/view/641294
- DOI: https://doi.org/10.36946/0869-7922-2021-29-3-35-43
- ID: 641294
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Abstract
The aim of the stady wos to investigate the mechanisms of suppression of cerebral bioelectrical activity under adverse effects caused by neurotoxicants using inhalation anesthesia with sevoflurane. The research included 19 cases (male/female 12/7, aged 19—55, BMIs under 35) with intracerebral tumors. Patients were under medical observation and neurosurgical treatment. Invasive procedures were carried out under sevoflurane-based general anesthesia with a dose of anesthetic varying from 0,8 to 1,3 MAC (minimum alveolar concentration). Technologically advanced neurosurgical procedures involved neurophysiological polymodal monitoring, which included EEG and ECoG testing. Probit analysis results showed that, with cerebral cortex bioelectrical activity suppression index equal to 32±8%, nearly half the cases displayed a formation of an «outburst-suppression» type of pattern on the scalp EEG. The condition for half the cases displaying a formation of this type of periodic pattern is the suppression index equaling 58±7% on ECoG. Space-and-time evolution of suppression patterns, formed on the cerebral cortex, is the main reason for persistence of uninterrupted activity on EEG. The obtained results allow to further define principles of neurodynamics, which apply to acute intoxication with neurotoxicants. With regard to relative similarity of intoxication-induced coma cases, registration of periodic EEG patterns even with a low suppression index indicates a more severe form of cerebral insufficiency.
About the authors
I. A. Kostenko
Polenov Neurosurgical Institute - Branch of the Almazov National Medical Research Centre
Author for correspondence.
Email: 9111208487@mail.ru
Irina A. Kostenko - Head of the Office of Non-Cognitive Research, Polenov Russian Research Neurosurgical Institute (branch of the Almazov National Research Medical Center) of the Ministry of Health of the Russian Federation.
191014, Saint Petersburg.
Russian FederationM. V. Aleksandrov
Polenov Neurosurgical Institute - Branch of the Almazov National Medical Research Centre; Institute of Toxicology of the Federal Medical and Biological Agency
Email: mdoktor@yandex.ru
Mikhail V. Aleksandrov.
Saint-Petersburg, 191014; Saint-Petersburg,192019.
Russian FederationV. S. Chernyi
Nikiforov Russian Center of Emergency and Radiation Medicine, Ministry of Emergency Situations of the Russian Federation
Email: 9111208487@mail.ru
Valerii S. Chernyi.
Saint-Petersburg, 194044.
Russian FederationReferences
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