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1.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11089035

ABSTRACT

We investigate several quantifiers of the electroencephalogram (EEG) signal with respect to their ability to indicate depth of anesthesia. For 17 patients anesthetized with sevoflurane, three established measures (two spectral and one based on the bispectrum), as well as a phase space based nonlinear correlation index were computed from consecutive EEG epochs. In the absence of an independent way to determine anesthesia depth, the standard was derived from measured blood plasma concentrations of the anesthetic via a pharmacokinetic/pharmacodynamic model for the estimated effective brain concentration of sevoflurane. In most patients, the highest correlation is observed for the nonlinear correlation index D*. In contrast to spectral measures, D* is found to decrease monotonically with increasing (estimated) depth of anesthesia, even when a "burst-suppression" pattern occurs in the EEG. The findings show the potential for applications of concepts derived from the theory of nonlinear dynamics, even if little can be assumed about the process under investigation.

2.
Eur J Neurol ; 5(1): 83-88, 1998 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-10210816

ABSTRACT

We investigated the influence of ovulatory and anovulatory menstrual cycles on seizure occurrence in female patients with complex partial seizures. We prospectively documented seizures in relation to menstrual cycles (defined by measurement of basal body temperature and progesterone serum concentrations) in 39 female patients. One hundred and thirty-two cycles of 35 patients entered final analysis. Only eight patients had anovulatory cycles, in 18 patients all cycles were ovulatory. In the remaining nine patients anovulatory as well as ovulatory cycles were documented. In ovulatory cycles the mean frequency of seizures during the days of menstruation was significantly higher as compared to the periovulatory or the luteal phase of the cycles. During anovulatory cycles seizure frequency was significantly lower during menstruation than in the remaining days of the cycles. Since progesterone is known to exhibit anticonvulsant effects, seizure occurrence during menstruation seems to be related to ovulatory cycles, possibly due to the premenstrual decrease of progesterone. Therapeutic recommendations for the treatment of seizures related to the menstrual cycle (catamenial seizures) include the administration of hormones, as progesterone (recommended especially for women with catamenial epilepsy who have a documented inadequate luteal phase) or the suppression of the menstrual hormonal cycle by synthetic gonadotropin releasing hormone analogs.

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