Title: Welcome to ALARIS AEP session
1Welcome toALARIS AEP session
- Kaare Jevnaker
- Alaris Medical
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4The patient
- The patient has 2 worries
- 1 Will he sleep during the operation?
- 2. Will he wake up after the operation?
5History
- 1965 First article about different levels of
anaesthesia. (States of awareness during general
anaesthesia) - Explicit and implicit memory. Different cognitive
stages. - Awareness today is related to Explicit recall
6Incidence of explicit recall
Remember being awake and recall things that were
said or done during operation
Number of patients
Year
Incidence
- Hutchinson 1960 1.2 656
- Harris 1971 1.6 120
- McKenna 1973 1.5 200
- Wilson 1975 0.8 490
- Flier 1986 1.4 140
- Liu 1991 0.2 (0.3) 1000 (684)
- Nordström 1997 0.2 (0.2) 1000 (1000)
- Ranta 1998 0.4 - 0.7 2612
- Myles 2000 0.11 10811
- Sandin 2000 0.15 (0.18) 11785 (7757)
The first half is not relevant today because the
anaesthesia technique has changes a lot.
With kind permission from Dr Rolf Sandin, Kalmar,
Sweden
7Why monitor sleep?It is important to think about
this.
- The implications of undersedation
- Patient remains immobilized but feels pain
- Although it is occurs in only 0.1 - 0.2 of all
surgeries, 23 million surgeries are performed in
the U.S. each year - Resulting in 35,000 cases of surgical awareness
- The implications of oversedation
- To avoid the possibility of surgical awareness
too much hypnotics and analgesics may be
administered - The patients recovery time is extended higher
room cost - More drugs than necessary are used higher drug
cost
8Auditory Evoked Potentials
9Basic basic basic basic basic basic
- The hearing is the last sense that leaves and the
first that returns during anaesthesia. - AEP is just the brain response to a click stimuli
through the hearing nerve - AEP is a very weak electrical signal wrapped in
the EEG background actvity. - Lets look at how tiny tiny this signal is.
10Burst Suppression
We look at spikes lt 3,5 uV. In contrast An
awake Pa amplitude is typically 0.7 uV. And, an
asleep amplitude is typically 0.4 uV
11400 x
40 x
ECG signal has approx. 400 x amplitude than the
AEP signals. EEG signal has approx. 40 x
amplitude than the AEP signal
12Extracting the evoked response Before A-Line it
took too long to detect and present (extract)
this weak signal, because it requires advanced
signal processing
1 click
128 clicks
256 clicks
1024 clicks
100 ms
click
13But, lets make this more visible
- Lets see what happens when we send a click
through the ear.
14Position of electrodes
A deviation in the positioning of the electrodes
up to 2 cm does not have significant influence on
the ARX-index.
15Place Headphones
To Monitor
Some prefer to wait with the headphones until
electrodes are connected
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17The auditory Pathway
2
18Medial geniculate and
primary auditory cortex
Acoustic nerve
and brainstem
19What does the AEP Look Like?
Pa
Pa latency
0.1µV
Pa amplitude
Nb
100 msec
20Basic knowledge
- The early cortical AEP waves called Pa and Nb,
which occurs between 20 and 80 ms reflects the
activity in the temporal lobe/primary auditory
cortex ( the site of sound registration) - Changes in the latency of these waves ( in
particular the Nb wave) are highly correlated
with a transition from awake to loss of
consciousness - Changes in the amplitude of these waves reflects
the interplay of general anaesthetics,surgical
stimulation and the obtunding of the latter by
analgesics!
21And, this is what happens
22Medial geniculate and
primary auditory cortex
Acoustic nerve
and brainstem
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36And, of the opposite during awakening
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45N
N
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46The AEP during Anaesthesia
With kind permission from Dr Christine Thornton,
Northwick Park, London, UK.
47Effect of intubation on the AEP
Pa
0.1µV
Nb
Post-intubation
Pre-intubation
100ms
With kind permission from Dr Christine Thornton,
Northwick Park, London, UK.
48The Effect of Midazolam on the AEP
Awake
Nb
Loss of eyelash response
0
100
50
Time (ms)
With kind permission from Dr Christine Thornton,
Northwick Park, London, UK.
49The effect of propofol on the AEP
Response to command
Nb
No response to command
0
100
50
Time (ms)
With kind permission from Dr Christine Thornton,
Northwick Park, London, UK.
50Effects of opioids on the AEP
- Controversy exists as to whether opioids affect
the AEP directly or indirectly. - A study of 2 groups
- 1 group was given an Opioid
- 1 group got normal saline prior to tracheal
intubation under general anaesthesia
With kind permission from Dr Christine Thornton,
Northwick Park, London, UK.
51Opioids
With kind permission from Dr Christine Thornton,
Northwick Park, London, UK.
52Conclusions
- The saline group had statistically significant
50 higher increase in Pa amplitude! - But, is it a direct or indirect effect?
- The Opioid group results could be because the
pain of intubation was blunted rather than a
direct effect on AEP itself. - However It demonstrates that the AEP meets the
clinical expectations of a signal which monitors
depth of anaesthesia.
With kind permission from Dr Christine Thornton,
Northwick Park, London, UK.
53Drawbacks of AER
- It will not work in deaf people. The extent to
which the AEP changes are affected needs to be
explored - A large amount of information is produced and
before the ALARIS AEP ? Monitor you got the
feedback too late. It took 2-3 minutes to collect
an average response.
54Conclusions
- Graded changes with depth of anaesthesia
- Similar changes for different anaesthetics
- Shows response to noxious stimulation
- AEP indicates level of consciousness
- Technology has been studied since early 1980s
55AEP signal processing?How can it be so fast?
56ALARIS AEP signal processing v. 1.4
57Moving time Averaging and ARX
ARX -model
MTA 256 sweeps
MTA 18 sweeps
58Index calculation?
59Index calculation?
AEP window 20-80 ms
xi xi1
60Index calculation
- So, then you have a real curve, the index is high
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- And, an almost flat curve gives a low index
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61What it is
- AAI is typically higher than 60 when the patient
is awake and decreases when the patient is
anaesthetised loss of consciousness typically
occurs when the AAI is below 30
62A typical case
63Fentanyl 0,15 Pentothal 250mg
Intubation. Sevo FI 0,2
Start surgery. Gyn. Lap. procedure . FI 1,0 MAC
1,0
Moved Patient on table
Tracrium 15mg
Index dropped and NMB was given to prepare
intubation
Intubation too soon. Fentanyl had not reached
peak effect.
TIVA with induction and Maintenance would have
prevented this
Patient still not deep enough and reacts.
Remember 50 sleep at 1 MAC
Induction started with normal doses
Penthotal dose was small for this patient. Gas
conc. too low
Patient was not deep enough to be moved on table.
Dose of gas too low.
64Put in trocar (insertion tube for scope) FI 1,8
MAC 1,4
Sevo stopped FI 0,7 MAC 0,9
At MAC 1,4 the patient is deep enough and all
problems stops
65Start Up
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79Induction is given
80EMG starts to drop
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84Burst Suppression appears
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93Starting to wake up
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95Observe Alarm and EMG
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101Operation over
102Exit
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104Check and transfer DATA
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113Use me again soon
114A good case
- Just to illustrate how important it is.
- Customer couldnt understand why the index was
high? - Complained that something was wrong
- All details captured by our man
- After downloading and descriptions the clinicians
agreed the anaesthesia was not optimal. - They could actually see things they never seen
before
115Questions?