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March 12, 2008 --Doctors don't need a widely used brain monitor to cut patients' risk of waking during surgery, a new study suggests.
Doctors call it "unintended intraoperative awareness" or "anesthesia awareness." Patients call it downright scary. It happens rarely -- to about one or two out of?1,000 surgery patients -- but it does happen: During surgery, patients become aware of things that are happening to them.
They may feel pain, discomfort, and fear. Paralyzed by anesthesia, they are unable to tell anyone what is happening to them. The experience usually is painless, and usually is brief. But once in a while it leaves patients deeply traumatized, says anesthesiology professor Michael Avidan, MB, BCh, of Washington University School of Medicine, St. Louis.
"Anesthesia awareness can be understood as people undergoing general anesthesia and having some sensory stimuli during the procedure -- something visual or auditory or painful -- which they remember afterward," Avidan tells WebMD. "It is often the case that it is not disturbing, that it is a brief experience, and patients do not complain of any long-term effects. But a certain proportion of patients will experience negative psychological consequences and even have posttraumatic stress disorder."
Some patients are at 10 times higher risk of anesthesia awareness than other patients. One in 100 of these patients experience a "waking" event. These high-risk patients:
(Have you been awake or aware during surgery? Share your experience on WebMD's Health Cafe message board.)
The bispectral index (BIS) monitor is supposed to help doctors know when patients are waking. The device, made by Aspect Medical Systems, uses a simple array of electrodes attached to a patient's forehead to monitor brain waves.
The device then uses a secret, proprietary algorithm to calculate a consciousness-level score. On a 0 to 100 scale, where zero is no brain activity and 100 is full consciousness, patients with a score of 40 to 60 are not supposed to experience anesthesia awareness.
In 2004, a clinical trial suggested that the device cut the risk of anesthesia awareness among high-risk surgery patients. Driven by media reports of patients who experienced waking during surgery -- and by a frightening Hollywood movie, Awake -- Advent's device became widely used. It's now found in about 60% of all U.S. operating rooms and is used in about 17% of surgeries requiring general anesthesia.
But does the device work better than the standard technique tracking the amount of anesthetic gas a patient exhales? Avidan and colleagues tested this in a new clinical trial that enrolled patients with at least one factor that put them at high risk of anesthesia awareness.