Anesthetic management of a patient with an electroencephalogram phenotype for a “vulnerable brain”: a case report

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Abstract

Background: Low frontal alpha power is an electroencephalogram phenotype suggesting vulnerability to anesthetics. This phenotype for a “vulnerable brain” carries risks for burst suppression at lower-than-expected anesthetic concentrations and therefore for postoperative delirium. Case presentation: A 73-year-old man underwent a laparoscopic Miles’ operation. He was monitored with a bispectral index monitor. Before the skin incision, the fraction of age-adjusted minimum alveolar concentration of desflurane was 0.48, and a spectrogram showed slow-delta oscillation despite a bispectral index value of 38–48. Although the fraction of age-adjusted minimum alveolar concentration of desflurane decreased to 0.33, the EEG signature remained unchanged, along with a similar bispectral index value. No burst suppression patterns were observed throughout the whole procedure, and he did not experience postoperative delirium. Conclusions: This case suggests that monitoring of electroencephalogram signatures is helpful for detecting patients with a “vulnerable brain” and for providing optimal anesthetic depth in such patients.

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Wakabayashi, R. (2023). Anesthetic management of a patient with an electroencephalogram phenotype for a “vulnerable brain”: a case report. JA Clinical Reports, 9(1). https://doi.org/10.1186/s40981-023-00616-w

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