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Human EEG during propofol anaesthesia shows large-scale changes including traveling slow waves1. Slow-wave saturation is a potentially individualised marker of loss of perception2. However, much remains unclear about the dynamics of slow waves. Iterated empirical mode decomposition (itEMD3) is a novel data-driven method for segregating data into physiologically relevant oscillatory modes. We used itEMD to identify spectral modes and their sources / sinks in propofol EEG. Viscosity is a physical quantity expressing the magnitude of resistance to flow. Considering traveling electric potentials in the brain as a flow, we extended the notion of viscosity to traveling brainwaves. Using this, we explored how brainwave viscosity changes in volunteer propofol anaesthesia.

Original publication

DOI

10.1016/j.bja.2021.11.005

Type

Journal article

Journal

British journal of anaesthesia

Publication Date

01/02/2022

Volume

128

Pages

e61 - e62