Physical and Physiological Mechanisms of Consciousness and General Anesthesia (Review)
- Autores: Lebedinskii K.M.1, Kovalenko A.N.2
- 
							Afiliações: 
							- Mechnikov North-Western State Medical University
- Ioffe Institute
 
- Edição: Volume 63, Nº 10 (2018)
- Páginas: 1397-1409
- Seção: Physical Approaches and Problems of Data Interpretation in the Life Sciences
- URL: https://journals.rcsi.science/1063-7842/article/view/202067
- DOI: https://doi.org/10.1134/S106378421810016X
- ID: 202067
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Resumo
General anesthesia (narcosis) is an induced, reversible inhibition of the central nervous system (CNS) with suppression of pain sensitivity, consciousness, motor, and vegetative activity during surgeries. The existing pharmacological theories provide no exhaustive explanation of the consciousness suppression mechanism, although mechanisms of other narcosis effects are well studied. The reason lies in the radical difference of the vertical construction scheme of CNS conduction pathways for organization of most of its perceptual and executive functions from the organization structures of the brain, which must be associated with processes of consciousness in information analysis and control command synthesis as a key synergetic factor of a self-organizing system. This makes it possible not only to explain the matter of phenomena of anesthesia through changing functional dynamic orderliness in the neural networks of the cerebral cortex, but also to control anesthesia depth and a patient’s condition in general with methods of self-organization analysis by informational richness of their regulation signals, monitoring fractal dimension trend of an entropy attractor generated at the same time.
Sobre autores
K. Lebedinskii
Mechnikov North-Western State Medical University
							Autor responsável pela correspondência
							Email: mail@lebedinski.com
				                					                																			                												                	Rússia, 							St. Petersburg, 191015						
A. Kovalenko
Ioffe Institute
							Autor responsável pela correspondência
							Email: ras-kan@mail.ru
				                					                																			                												                	Rússia, 							St. Petersburg, 194021						
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