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BJA Advance Access originally published online on March 19, 2007
British Journal of Anaesthesia 2007 98(5):645-648; doi:10.1093/bja/aem061
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© The Board of Management and Trustees of the British Journal of Anaesthesia 2007. All rights reserved. For Permissions, please e-mail: journals.permissions@oxfordjournals.org

Use of conventional ECG electrodes for depth of anaesthesia monitoring using the cerebral state index: a clinical study in day surgery

R. E. Anderson1, U. Sartipy1 and J. G. Jakobsson2,3,*

1 Department of Molecular Medicine and Surgery
2 Department of Anaesthesiology and Intensive Care, Karolinska Institute, Stockholm, Sweden
3 Department of Anaesthesiology, Sabbatsberg Hospital, Stockholm, Sweden

* Corresponding author: Department of Anaesthesiology, Sabbatsberg Hospital, S-113 24 Stockholm, Sweden. E-mail: jan.jakobsson{at}ki.se

Background: The cost–benefit relationship for depth of anaesthesia monitors is complicated by the high cost of specially designed EEG electrodes. The cerebral state index (CSI) monitor will accept regular ECG electrodes with snap connectors. The purpose of this study was to determine if generic ECG electrodes could replace the more expensive proprietary EEG electrodes for the CSI monitor.

Methods: Two identical cerebral state monitors were used simultaneously during sevoflurane anaesthesia for knee arthroscopy in 14 ASA I–II patients. One monitor used proprietary (Danmeter) EEG electrodes and the other used ECG electrodes (3MTM Red DotTM Diagnostic ECG Electrodes). Paired CSI values were recorded every other minute. Anaesthetic depth was titrated clinically. Sedation depth was scored according to the Observer's Assessment of Alertness/Sedation (OAAS) scale.

Results: The agreement between the two measures was found to be high, mean difference – 0.23, and the overall repeatability mean bias was 6.6 and 153/163 pairs (94%) were located within the 95% limits of agreement. No major difference was noted in impedance, noise, or artifacts. A large overlap in CSI was noted for each level of the OAAS scale; patients with CSI values as low as 40–50 responded whereas patients not responding to surgical stimulation had CSI values as high as 75. The direct cost of disposables decreased from 4{euro} to 0.50{euro} per patient by using ordinary ECG electrodes.

Conclusions: Switching from proprietary EEG electrodes to ordinary generic ECG electrodes maintains the same accuracy at about a 10th of the cost when measuring CSI during day surgery with sevoflurane anaesthesia.

Keywords: anaesthesia, depth, monitoring; anaesthesia, general; anaesthetics volatile, sevoflurane; monitoring, CSI


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British Journal of Anaesthesia, 6 Jun 2007 [Full text]


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