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Processed electroencephalography-guided general anesthesia and norepinephrine requirements: A randomized trial in patients having vascular surgery

Kristen K Thomsen, Daniel I. Sessler, Linda Krause, Phillip Hoppe, Benjamin Opitz, T.M. Kessler, Viorel Chindris, Alina Bergholz, Moritz Flick, Karim Kouz, Christian Zöllner, Leonie Schulte‐Uentrop, Bernd Saugel

2024Journal of Clinical Anesthesia19 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

STUDY OBJECTIVE: Processed electroencephalography (pEEG) may help clinicians optimize depth of general anesthesia. Avoiding excessive depth of anesthesia may reduce intraoperative hypotension and the need for vasopressors. We tested the hypothesis that pEEG-guided - compared to non-pEEG-guided - general anesthesia reduces the amount of norepinephrine needed to keep intraoperative mean arterial pressure above 65 mmHg in patients having vascular surgery. DESIGN: Randomized controlled clinical trial. SETTING: University Medical Center Hamburg-Eppendorf, Hamburg, Germany. PATIENTS: 110 patients having vascular surgery. INTERVENTIONS: pEEG-guided general anesthesia. MEASUREMENTS: Our primary endpoint was the average norepinephrine infusion rate from the beginning of induction of anesthesia until the end of surgery. MAIN RESULT: , p = 0.004). Patients assigned to pEEG-guided versus non-pEEG-guided general anesthesia, had a median time-weighted minimum alveolar concentration of 0.7 (0.6, 0.8) versus 0.8 (0.7, 0.8) (p = 0.006) and a median percentage of time Patient State Index was <25 of 12 (1, 41) % versus 23 (3, 49) % (p = 0.279). CONCLUSION: pEEG-guided - compared to non-pEEG-guided - general anesthesia reduced the amount of norepinephrine needed to keep mean arterial pressure above 65 mmHg by about a third in patients having vascular surgery. Whether reduced intraoperative norepinephrine requirements resulting from pEEG-guided general anesthesia translate into improved patient-centered outcomes remains to be determined in larger trials.

Topics & Concepts

MedicineAnesthesiaNorepinephrineRandomized controlled trialBlood pressureMean arterial pressureConfidence intervalBurst suppressionSurgeryHeart rateElectroencephalographyInternal medicinePsychiatryDopamineAnesthesia and Sedative AgentsHemodynamic Monitoring and TherapyAnesthesia and Pain Management