Impact of Age on the Occurrence of Processed Electroencephalographic Burst Suppression.

IF 4.6 2区 医学 Q1 ANESTHESIOLOGY Anesthesia and analgesia Pub Date : 2024-11-01 Epub Date: 2024-08-23 DOI:10.1213/ANE.0000000000007143
Stefan Schwerin, Gerhard Schneider, Matthias Kreuzer, Stephan Kratzer
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Abstract

Background: Patient age is assumed to be an important risk factor for the occurrence of burst suppression, yet this has still to be confirmed by large datasets.

Methods: In this single-center retrospective analysis at a university hospital, the electronic patient records of 38,628 patients (≥18 years) receiving general anesthesia between January 2016 and December 2018 were analyzed. Risk factors for burst suppression were evaluated using univariate and multivariable analysis. We measured the incidence of burst suppression as indicated by the burst suppression ratio (BSR) of the Entropy Module, the maximum and mean BSR values, relative burst suppression duration, mean volatile anesthetic concentrations, and mean age-adjusted minimum alveolar concentrations (aaMAC) at burst suppression, and cases of potentially misclassified burst suppression episodes. Analyses were done separately for the total anesthesia period, as well as for the Induction and Maintenance phase. The association with age was evaluated using linear and polynomial fits and by calculating correlation coefficients.

Results: Of the 54,266 patients analyzed, 38,628 were included, and 19,079 patients exhibited episodes with BSR >0. Patients with BSR >0 were significantly older, and age had the highest predictive power for BSR >0 (area under the receiving operating characteristic [AUROC] = 0.646 [0.638-0.654]) compared to other patient or procedural factors. The probability of BSR >0 increased linearly with patient age (ρ = 0.96-0.99) between 1.9% and 9.8% per year. While maximal and mean BSR showed a nonlinear relationship with age, relative burst suppression duration also increased linearly during maintenance (ρ = 0.83). Further, episodes potentially indicating burst suppression that were not detected by the Entropy BSR algorithm also became more frequent with age. Volatile anesthetic concentrations sufficient to induce BSR >0 were negatively correlated with age (sevoflurane: ρ = -0.71), but remained close to an aaMAC of 1.0.

Conclusions: The probability of burst suppression during general anesthesia increases linearly with age in adult patients, while lower anesthetic concentrations induce burst suppression with increasing patient age. Simultaneously, algorithm-based burst suppression detection appears to perform worse in older patients. These findings highlight the necessity to further enhance EEG application and surveillance strategies in anesthesia.

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年龄对加工脑电波脉冲抑制发生的影响
背景:患者年龄被认为是发生爆发抑制的一个重要风险因素,但这一点仍有待大型数据集证实:在这一大学医院的单中心回顾性分析中,对 2016 年 1 月至 2018 年 12 月间接受全身麻醉的 38628 名患者(≥18 岁)的电子病历进行了分析。通过单变量和多变量分析评估了爆破抑制的风险因素。我们测量了熵模块猝发抑制比(BSR)显示的猝发抑制发生率、BSR 最大值和平均值、相对猝发抑制持续时间、猝发抑制时的平均挥发性麻醉剂浓度和平均年龄调整后最低肺泡浓度(aaMAC),以及可能被错误分类的猝发抑制发作病例。对整个麻醉期以及诱导期和维持期分别进行了分析。通过线性拟合和多项式拟合以及计算相关系数来评估与年龄的关系:在分析的 54,266 例患者中,38,628 例被纳入,19,079 例患者出现了 BSR >0 的情况。BSR >0 的患者年龄明显偏大,与其他患者或程序因素相比,年龄对 BSR >0 的预测能力最高(接受操作特征下面积 [AUROC] = 0.646 [0.638-0.654])。BSR >0的概率随患者年龄线性增加(ρ = 0.96-0.99),每年在1.9%到9.8%之间。虽然最大和平均 BSR 与年龄呈非线性关系,但在维持过程中,相对爆发抑制持续时间也呈线性增长(ρ = 0.83)。此外,熵 BSR 算法未检测到的可能表明猝发抑制的事件也随着年龄的增长而变得更加频繁。足以诱导 BSR >0 的挥发性麻醉剂浓度与年龄呈负相关(七氟烷:ρ = -0.71),但仍接近 1.0 的 aaMAC:成年患者在全身麻醉过程中发生猝发抑制的概率随年龄呈线性增长,而随着患者年龄的增加,较低的麻醉剂浓度也会引起猝发抑制。同时,基于算法的爆发抑制检测在老年患者中似乎表现较差。这些发现凸显了进一步加强麻醉中脑电图应用和监测策略的必要性。
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来源期刊
Anesthesia and analgesia
Anesthesia and analgesia 医学-麻醉学
CiteScore
9.90
自引率
7.00%
发文量
817
审稿时长
2 months
期刊介绍: Anesthesia & Analgesia exists for the benefit of patients under the care of health care professionals engaged in the disciplines broadly related to anesthesiology, perioperative medicine, critical care medicine, and pain medicine. The Journal furthers the care of these patients by reporting the fundamental advances in the science of these clinical disciplines and by documenting the clinical, laboratory, and administrative advances that guide therapy. Anesthesia & Analgesia seeks a balance between definitive clinical and management investigations and outstanding basic scientific reports. The Journal welcomes original manuscripts containing rigorous design and analysis, even if unusual in their approach.
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