In anesthesia automation, one of the main important issues is the availability of a reliable measurement of the depth of consciousness level (hypnosis) of the patient. According to this value, the hypnotic drug dosage can be adequately calculated. One of the most studied hypnosis indexes is the bispectral index (BIS). In this article we analyzed an alternative called patient state index (PSI). The objectives of this study are, first, to validate the accuracy of the PSI describing the hypnosis level during the maintenance phase of general anesthesia, by comparing with the BIS and, second, to model the relationship between propofol infusion rate and PSI values, obtained from a SEDLine monitor. For this, real data from patients undergoing general anesthesia simultaneously monitored with both BIS and PSI signals was used. Results obtained are interesting for a correct interpretation of PSI signal in clinical practice.
The administration of anesthetics during a surgical procedure has been done historically in a manual way with the anesthesiologist deciding what amounts and at what rates to use. Over the last few decades there has been a rapid increase in the automation of many medical areas including anesthesiology, with that increased level of automation have also appeared new ways to measure the level of sedation in patients. Historically, one of the most frequently index used has been the BIS, which has proven rather reliable as an indicator. More recently, another index called PSI has attracted interest of practitioners. In this article a comparison of these two indexes was performed. Data recording BIS and PSI values from surgical operations for several patients were collected and analyzed. The results seem to indicate that it is to be expected that in 95% of the cases the correlation between the BIS and PSI index will be at least 0.6866.
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