Abstract
A new processed EEG machine, the Lifescan, which uses aperiodic analysis, was used to monitor cerebral activity prospectively in twenty-one patients undergoing carotid artery surgery under general anaesthesia. The machine was easy to apply, use and read. Volatile agents caused a bilateral decrease in high frequency activity. Unilateral changes consistent with cerebral ischaemia at the time of carotid cross-clamping were also seen. One such prolonged change was not associated with neurological deficit. A further patient awoke with neurological deficit without displaying Lifescan evidence of ischaemia. The machine requires further assessment.
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CITATION STYLE
Silbert, B. S., Koumoundouros, E., Davies, M. J., & Cronin, K. D. (1989). The use of aperiodic analysis of the EEG during carotid artery surgery. Anaesthesia and Intensive Care, 17(1), 16–23. https://doi.org/10.1177/0310057x8901700105
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