Title :
Hypnosis control based on the minimum concentration of anesthetic drug for maintaining appropriate hypnosis
Author :
Furutani, Eiko ; Nishigaki, Yuki ; Kanda, Chiaki ; Takeda, Takahiro ; Shirakami, Gotaro
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Electr. Eng., Kyoto Univ., Kyoto, Japan
Abstract :
This paper proposes a novel hypnosis control method using Auditory Evoked Potential Index (aepEX) as a hypnosis index. In order to avoid side effects of an anesthetic drug, it is desirable to reduce the amount of an anesthetic drug during surgery. For this purpose many studies of hypnosis control systems have been done. Most of them use Bispectral Index (BIS), another hypnosis index, but it has problems of dependence on anesthetic drugs and nonsmooth change near some particular values. On the other hand, aepEX has an ability of clear distinction between patient consciousness and unconsciousness and independence of anesthetic drugs. The control method proposed in this paper consists of two elements: estimating the minimum effect-site concentration for maintaining appropriate hypnosis and adjusting infusion rate of an anesthetic drug, propofol, using model predictive control. The minimum effect-site concentration is estimated utilizing the property of aepEX pharmacodynamics. The infusion rate of propofol is adjusted so that effect-site concentration of propofol may be kept near and always above the minimum effect-site concentration. Simulation results of hypnosis control using the proposed method show that the minimum concentration can be estimated appropriately and that the proposed control method can maintain hypnosis adequately and reduce the total infusion amount of propofol.
Keywords :
auditory evoked potentials; drugs; estimation theory; neurophysiology; physiological models; surgery; BIS; aepEX pharmacodynamics; anesthetic drug independence; anesthetic drug infusion rate adjustment; anesthetic drug reduction; anesthetic drug side effect; auditory evoked potential index; bispectral index; hypnosis control method; hypnosis control simulation; hypnosis control system; hypnosis index; minimum anesthetic drug concentration; minimum concentration estimation; minimum effect-site concentration estimation; nonsmooth change dependence; patient consciousness distinction; patient unconsciousness distinction; propofol effect-site concentration; propofol infusion rate; propofol total infusion amount reduction; surgery; Accuracy; Anesthetic drugs; Control systems; Estimation; Indexes; Surgery;
Conference_Titel :
Engineering in Medicine and Biology Society (EMBC), 2013 35th Annual International Conference of the IEEE
Conference_Location :
Osaka
DOI :
10.1109/EMBC.2013.6610292