The primary objective of this study is to investigate the influence of a standardized noxious stimulus on the ANI, SPI and hemodynamic parameters during standard propofol and sufentanil TCI and to see if the ANI and SPI are predictive of a hemodynamic reaction. In addition the investigators compare the performance of ANI and SPI against one another as well as investigate if ANI or SPI can be used to find the ideal CeSUF for a given patient.
During general anesthesia hypnosis can be monitored routinely using EEG derivates like Bispectral index (BIS), entropy,.… However, monitoring analgesia or more precisely the nociceptive-antinociceptive (analgetic) balance during anesthesia proved more difficult. Clinical signs such as heart rate (tachycardia) or blood pressure (hypertension) are usually observed and used to assess nociception and a patient's autonomic unbalance. During general anesthesia administration of opioids like sufentanil and remifentanil decrease the ANS reactivity to noxious stimulation. Recently two variables based on standard anesthesia monitor equipment have been introduced into clinical practice: the Analgesia Nociception Index (ANI), derived from analysis of the small beat-to-beat oscillations of the heart rate during respiration, the heart rate variability (HRV), and the Surgical Pleth Index (SPI), calculated from the plethysmographic amplitude and heart beat interval.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
NON_RANDOMIZED
Purpose
PREVENTION
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
20
Application of a skin electrode
Standard photoplethysmography
UZ Brussel
Jette, Belgium
The influence of a standardized noxious stimulus on pain measurement by means of analgesia nociception index (numerical score 0-100)
dimensionless number
Time frame: 30 minutes
Predictive capacity of ANI and SPI of hemodynamic reactivity by means of analgesia nociception index (numerical score 0-100) or by SPI (numerical index 100-0)
Comparing the ANI and SPI before and during possible hemodynamic reactivity
Time frame: 30 minutes
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