Abstract

The neuronal mechanisms how anesthetics lead to loss of consciousness are unclear. Thalamocortical interactions are crucially involved in conscious perception; hence the thalamocortical network might be a promising target for anesthetic modulation of neuronal information pertaining to arousal and waking behavior. General anesthetics affect the neurophysiology of the thalamus and the cortex but the exact mechanisms of how anesthetics interfere with processing thalamocortical information remain to be elucidated. Here we investigated the effect of the anesthetic agents sevoflurane and propofol on thalamocortical network activity in vitro. We used voltage-sensitive dye imaging techniques to analyze the cortical depolarization in response to stimulation of the thalamic ventrobasal nucleus in brain slices from mice. Exposure to sevoflurane globally decreased cortical depolarization in a dose-dependent manner. Sevoflurane reduced the intensity and extent of cortical depolarization and delayed thalamocortical signal propagation. In contrast, propofol neither affected area nor amplitude of cortical depolarization. However, propofol exposure resulted in regional changes in spatial distribution of maximum fluorescence intensity in deep regions of the cortex. In summary, our experiments revealed substance-specific effects on the thalamocortical network. Functional changes of the neuronal network are known to be pivotally involved in the anesthetic-induced loss of consciousness. Our findings provide further evidence that the mechanisms of anesthetic-mediated loss of consciousness are drug- and pathway-specific.

Highlights

  • The underlying mechanisms leading to anesthetic-induced loss of consciousness remain unclear

  • We evaluated the effect of sevoflurane and propofol on cortical depolarization following an electric stimulus applied to the thalamic VPM

  • While we observed a sevoflurane-induced reduction in intensity and activated cortical area following the stimulus, we found that propofol did not change these parameters

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Summary

Introduction

The underlying mechanisms leading to anesthetic-induced loss of consciousness remain unclear. Electrophysiological studies showed that anesthetics decrease the information content in the signal and disrupt or impair directed information flow, i.e., cause an impairment of cortical feedback connectivity and frontal-parietal communication (Ku et al, 2011; Jordan et al, 2013; Ranft et al, 2016). These EEG analyses are restricted to cortical activity, and can only infer the influence of subcortical structures like the thalamus

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