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      Electroencephalographic insights into the pathophysiological mechanisms of emergence delirium in children and corresponding clinical treatment strategies

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          Abstract

          Emergence delirium is a common postoperative complication in patients undergoing general anesthesia, especially in children. In severe cases, it can cause unnecessary self-harm, affect postoperative recovery, lead to parental dissatisfaction, and increase medical costs. With the widespread use of inhalation anesthetic drugs (such as sevoflurane and desflurane), the incidence of emergence delirium in children is gradually increasing; however, its pathogenesis in children is complex and unclear. Several studies have shown that age, pain, and anesthetic drugs are strongly associated with the occurrence of emergence delirium. Alterations in central neurophysiology are essential intermediate processes in the development of emergence delirium. Compared to adults, the pediatric nervous system is not fully developed; therefore, the pediatric electroencephalogram may vary slightly by age. Moreover, pain and anesthetic drugs can cause changes in the excitability of the central nervous system, resulting in electroencephalographic changes. In this paper, we review the pathogenesis of and prevention strategies for emergence delirium in children from the perspective of brain electrophysiology—especially for commonly used pharmacological treatments—to provide the basis for understanding the development of emergence delirium as well as its prevention and treatment, and to suggest future research direction.

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          Most cited references103

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          Neural mechanism underlying acupuncture analgesia.

          Acupuncture has been accepted to effectively treat chronic pain by inserting needles into the specific "acupuncture points" (acupoints) on the patient's body. During the last decades, our understanding of how the brain processes acupuncture analgesia has undergone considerable development. Acupuncture analgesia is manifested only when the intricate feeling (soreness, numbness, heaviness and distension) of acupuncture in patients occurs following acupuncture manipulation. Manual acupuncture (MA) is the insertion of an acupuncture needle into acupoint followed by the twisting of the needle up and down by hand. In MA, all types of afferent fibers (Abeta, Adelta and C) are activated. In electrical acupuncture (EA), a stimulating current via the inserted needle is delivered to acupoints. Electrical current intense enough to excite Abeta- and part of Adelta-fibers can induce an analgesic effect. Acupuncture signals ascend mainly through the spinal ventrolateral funiculus to the brain. Many brain nuclei composing a complicated network are involved in processing acupuncture analgesia, including the nucleus raphe magnus (NRM), periaqueductal grey (PAG), locus coeruleus, arcuate nucleus (Arc), preoptic area, nucleus submedius, habenular nucleus, accumbens nucleus, caudate nucleus, septal area, amygdale, etc. Acupuncture analgesia is essentially a manifestation of integrative processes at different levels in the CNS between afferent impulses from pain regions and impulses from acupoints. In the last decade, profound studies on neural mechanisms underlying acupuncture analgesia predominately focus on cellular and molecular substrate and functional brain imaging and have developed rapidly. Diverse signal molecules contribute to mediating acupuncture analgesia, such as opioid peptides (mu-, delta- and kappa-receptors), glutamate (NMDA and AMPA/KA receptors), 5-hydroxytryptamine, and cholecystokinin octapeptide. Among these, the opioid peptides and their receptors in Arc-PAG-NRM-spinal dorsal horn pathway play a pivotal role in mediating acupuncture analgesia. The release of opioid peptides evoked by electroacupuncture is frequency-dependent. EA at 2 and 100Hz produces release of enkephalin and dynorphin in the spinal cord, respectively. CCK-8 antagonizes acupuncture analgesia. The individual differences of acupuncture analgesia are associated with inherited genetic factors and the density of CCK receptors. The brain regions associated with acupuncture analgesia identified in animal experiments were confirmed and further explored in the human brain by means of functional imaging. EA analgesia is likely associated with its counter-regulation to spinal glial activation. PTX-sesntive Gi/o protein- and MAP kinase-mediated signal pathways as well as the downstream events NF-kappaB, c-fos and c-jun play important roles in EA analgesia.
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            General anesthesia, sleep, and coma.

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              Experimental and theoretical approaches to conscious processing.

              Recent experimental studies and theoretical models have begun to address the challenge of establishing a causal link between subjective conscious experience and measurable neuronal activity. The present review focuses on the well-delimited issue of how an external or internal piece of information goes beyond nonconscious processing and gains access to conscious processing, a transition characterized by the existence of a reportable subjective experience. Converging neuroimaging and neurophysiological data, acquired during minimal experimental contrasts between conscious and nonconscious processing, point to objective neural measures of conscious access: late amplification of relevant sensory activity, long-distance cortico-cortical synchronization at beta and gamma frequencies, and "ignition" of a large-scale prefronto-parietal network. We compare these findings to current theoretical models of conscious processing, including the Global Neuronal Workspace (GNW) model according to which conscious access occurs when incoming information is made globally available to multiple brain systems through a network of neurons with long-range axons densely distributed in prefrontal, parieto-temporal, and cingulate cortices. The clinical implications of these results for general anesthesia, coma, vegetative state, and schizophrenia are discussed. Copyright © 2011 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                URI : https://loop.frontiersin.org/people/2594925/overviewRole: Role: Role:
                URI : https://loop.frontiersin.org/people/1611779/overviewRole: Role:
                URI : https://loop.frontiersin.org/people/1666817/overviewRole: Role:
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                Role: Role: Role:
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                Journal
                Front Pharmacol
                Front Pharmacol
                Front. Pharmacol.
                Frontiers in Pharmacology
                Frontiers Media S.A.
                1663-9812
                19 June 2024
                2024
                : 15
                : 1349105
                Affiliations
                [1] 1 Department of Anesthesiology , Shengjing Hospital of China Medical University , Shenyang, China
                [2] 2 Cancer Hospital , Chinese Academy of Medical Sciences , Beijing, China
                [3] 3 Department of Anesthesiology , Liaoning Cancer Hospital and Institute , Shenyang, China
                [4] 4 Department of Anesthesiology , The First Affiliated Hospital of China Medical University , Shenyang, China
                [5] 5 Department of Anesthesiology , The Affiliated Hospital of Qingdao University , Qingdao, China
                Author notes

                Edited by: Francisco Lopez-Munoz, Camilo José Cela University, Spain

                Reviewed by: Yitian Yang, Henan Provincial People’s Hospital, China

                Huanghui Wu, Shanghai Fourth People’s Hospital, China

                *Correspondence: Jun Chai, chaijun_cmu@ 123456163.com
                [ † ]

                These authors have contributed equally to this work and share first authorship

                Article
                1349105
                10.3389/fphar.2024.1349105
                11219819
                38962301
                30560c32-506d-4421-a3da-5a0ad71b53b9
                Copyright © 2024 Gao, Li, Chai, Li, Pan, Liu, Li, Qin, Kang and Zhu.

                This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) and the copyright owner(s) are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.

                History
                : 04 December 2023
                : 26 February 2024
                Funding
                The author(s) declare that no financial support was received for the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article.
                Categories
                Pharmacology
                Review
                Custom metadata
                Neuropharmacology

                Pharmacology & Pharmaceutical medicine
                emergence delirium,neurophysiology,electroencephalography,pediatrics,general anesthesia,treatment

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