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Section: Application Domains

General Remarks

The research directions of the team are motivated by general anaesthesia (GA) that has attracted our attention in the last years. The following sections explain in some detail the motivation of our work on the four major phenomena of GA: loss of consciousness, immobility, amnesia and analgesia.

During general anaesthesia, the electroencephalogram (EEG) on the scalp changes characteristically: increasing the anaesthetic drug concentration the amplitudes of oscillations in the alpha band (8-12Hz) and in the delta band (2-8Hz) increase amplitudes in frontal electrodes at low drug concentrations whereas the spectral power decreases in the gamma band (20-60Hz). This characteristic change in the power is the basis of today’s EEG-monitors that assist the anaesthetist in the control of the anaesthesia depths of patients during surgery. However, the conventional monitors exhibit a large variability between the patients detected anaesthetic depth and their real depth. Moreover, a certain number of patients re-gain consciousness during surgery (about 1-2 out of 1000) and a large percentage of patients suffer from diverse after-effects, such as nausea or long-lasting cognitive impairments such as partial amnesia (from days to weeks). Since surgery under general anaesthesia is part of a hospital’s everyday practice, a large number of patients suffer from these events everyday. One reason for the lacking control of such disadvantageous effects is the dramatic lack of knowledge on what is going on in the brain during general anaesthesia and a weak EEG-online monitoring system during anaesthesia. Consequently, to improve the situation of patients during and after surgery and to develop improved anaesthetic procedures or even drugs, research is necessary to learn more about the neural processes in the brain and develop new monitoring machines.