Interactions between cardiac, respiratory, and EEG-delta oscillations in rats during anaesthesia.

Musizza, Bojan and Stefanovska, Aneta and McClintock, Peter V. E. and Palu, Milan and Petrovčič, Janko and Ribarič, Samo and Bajrović, Fajko F. (2007) Interactions between cardiac, respiratory, and EEG-delta oscillations in rats during anaesthesia. The Journal of Physiology, 580 (1). pp. 315-326. ISSN 0022-3751

[thumbnail of ratsjpconversion1Preprint]
Preview
PDF (ratsjpconversion1Preprint)
ratsjpconversion1Preprint.pdf - Submitted Version

Download (592kB)

Abstract

We hypothesized that, associated with the state of anaesthesia, characteristic changes exist in both cardio-respiratory and cerebral oscillator parameters and couplings, perhaps varying with depth of anaesthesia. Electrocardiograms (ECGs), respiration and electroencephalograms (EEGs) were recorded from two groups of 10 rats during the entire course of anaesthesia following the administration of a single bolus of ketamine–xylazine (KX group) or pentobarbital (PB group). The phase dynamics approach was then used to extract the instantaneous frequencies of heart beat, respiration and slow δ-waves (within 0.5–3.5 Hz). The amplitudes of δ- and θ-waves were analysed by use of a time–frequency representation of the EEG signal within 0.5–7.5 Hz obtained by wavelet transformation, using the Morlet mother wavelet. For the KX group, where slow δ-waves constituted the dominant spectral component, the Hilbert transform was applied to obtain the instantaneous δ-frequency. The θ-activity was spread over too wide a spectral range for its phase to be meaningfully defined. For both agents, we observed two distinct phases of anaesthesia, with a marked increase in θ-wave activity occurring on passage from a deeper phase of anaesthesia to a shallower one. In other respects, the effects of the two anaesthetics were very different. For KX anaesthesia, the two phases were separated by a marked change in all three instantaneous frequencies: stable, deep, anaesthesia with small frequency variability was followed by a sharp transition to shallow anaesthesia with large frequency variability, lasting until the animal awoke. The transition occurred 16–76 min after injection of the anaesthetic, with simultaneous reduction in the δ-wave amplitude. For PB anaesthesia, the two epochs were separated by the return of a positive response to the pinch test at 53–94 min, following which it took a further period of 45–70 min for the animal to awaken. δ-Waves were not apparent at any stage of PB anaesthesia. We applied non-linear dynamics and information theory to seek evidence of causal relationships between the cardiac, respiratory and slow δ-oscillations. We demonstrate that, for both groups, respiration drives the cardiac oscillator during deep anaesthesia. During shallow KX anaesthesia the direction either reverses, or the cardio-respiratory interaction becomes insignificant; in the deep phase, there is a unidirectional deterministic interaction of respiration with slow δ-oscillations. For PB anaesthesia, the cardio-respiratory interaction weakens during the second phase but, otherwise, there is no observable change in the interactions. We conclude that non-linear dynamics and information theory can be used to identify different stages of anaesthesia and the effects of different anaesthetics.

Item Type:
Journal Article
Journal or Publication Title:
The Journal of Physiology
Additional Information:
Application of nonlinear dynamics to an'sthesia, and first observation of causal relationships between brain (EEG) and cardiovascular oscillations. The work led to major FP6 funding, paving the way to a novel depth-of-an'sthesia monitor. Stefanovska provided central idea, supervised PhD student, guided analysis, and drafted the paper. RAE_import_type : Journal article RAE_uoa_type : Physics
Uncontrolled Keywords:
/dk/atira/pure/subjectarea/asjc/1300/1314
Subjects:
?? physiologyqc physics ??
ID Code:
2282
Deposited By:
Deposited On:
04 Apr 2008 08:13
Refereed?:
Yes
Published?:
Published
Last Modified:
18 Dec 2023 01:04