Abstract

BackgroundSpectral-based EEG is used to monitor anaesthetic state during surgical procedures in adults. Spectral EEG features that can resemble the patterns seen in adults emerge in children after the age of 10 months and cannot distinguish wakefulness and anaesthesia in the youngest children. There is a need to explore alternative EEG measures. We hypothesise that functional connectivity is one of the measures that can help distinguish between consciousness states in children. MethodsAn EEG data set of children undergoing sevoflurane general anaesthesia (age 0–3 yr) was reanalysed using debiased weighted phase lag index as a measure of functional connectivity in wakefulness (n=38) and anaesthesia (n=73). Network topology measures were compared between states in 0- to 6-, 6- to 10-, and >10-month-old children. ResultsFunctional connectivity was reduced in anaesthesia vs wakefulness in delta band (n=cluster of 17 significant connections; P=0.013; 58% connections surviving thresholding in wakefulness and 49% in anaesthesia). Network density and node degree were lower in anaesthesia even in the youngest children (0.57 in wakefulness; 0.48 in anaesthesia; t [9]=3.39; P=0.029; G=0.98; confidence interval [CI] [0.25–1.77]). Modularity was higher in anaesthesia (0–6 months: 0.16 in wakefulness and 0.19 in anaesthesia, t [9]=–2.95, P=0.04, G=–0.85, CI [–1.60 to –0.16]; >10 months: 0.16 vs 0.21, t [13]=–6.45, P<0.001, G=–1.62, CI [–2.49 to –0.85]) and decreased with age (ρ [73]=–0.456; P<0.001). ConclusionsAnaesthesia modulates functional connectivity. Increased segregation into a more modular structure in anaesthesia decreases with age as adult-like features develop. These findings advance our understanding of the network architecture underlying the effects of anaesthesia on the developing brain.

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