Browsing by Author "Silva, A."
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- Electroencephalogram-based indices applied to dogs' depth of anaesthesia monitoringPublication . Brás, Susana; Georgakis, A.; Ribeiro, L.; Ferreira, David A.; Silva, A.; Antunes, L.; Nunes, Catarina S.Hypnotic drug administration causes alterations in the electroencephalogram (EEG) in a dose-dependent manner. These changes cannot be identified easily in the raw EEG, therefore EEG based indices were adopted for assessing depth of anaesthesia (DoA). This study examines several indices for estimating dogs' DoA. Data (EEG, clinical end-points) were collected from 8 dogs anaesthetized with propofol. EEG was initially collected without propofol. Then, 100 ml h−1 (1000 mg h−1) of propofol 1% infusion rate was administered until a deep anaesthetic stage was reached. The infusion rate was temporarily increased to 200 ml h−1 (2000 mg h−1) to achieve 80% of burst suppression. The index performance was accessed by correlation coefficient with the propofol concentrations, and prediction probability with the anaesthetic clinical end-points. The temporal entropy and the averaged instantaneous frequency were the best indices because they exhibit: (a) strong correlations with propofol concentrations, (b) high probabilities of predicting anaesthesia clinical end-points.
- Modelling the dynamics of depth of anaesthesia: cerebral state index in dogsPublication . Bressan, Nadja; Castro, A.; Bras, S.; Ribeiro, L.; Ferreira, D. A.; Silva, A.; Antunes, L.; Nunes, Catarina S.The goal of this study was to obtain models that described the relation between the anaesthetic drug infusions (propofol) and an electroencephalogram (EEG) derived index (Cerebral State Index - CSI) during general anaesthesia in dogs. The first phase integrated the adaptation of hardware for EEG acquisition and exploration for the best electrodes position in dogs skull. The clinical protocol implementation and data collection were the next steps followed by CSI modeling. CSI showed adequate response to changes in drug infusion, reflecting the changes of depth of anaesthesia in dogs. The models obtained adjusted well to the original CSI data and also predicted the CSI trend during surgery. Using this monitor in current practice might improve quality in the anaesthesia procedure providing a useful tool to administer a correct sedation.