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A Conserved Behavioral State Barrier Impedes Transitions between Anesthetic-Induced Unconsciousness and Wakefulness: Evidence for Neural Inertia

Overview of attention for article published in PLOS ONE, July 2010
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Title
A Conserved Behavioral State Barrier Impedes Transitions between Anesthetic-Induced Unconsciousness and Wakefulness: Evidence for Neural Inertia
Published in
PLOS ONE, July 2010
DOI 10.1371/journal.pone.0011903
Pubmed ID
Authors

Eliot B. Friedman, Yi Sun, Jason T. Moore, Hsiao-Tung Hung, Qing Cheng Meng, Priyan Perera, William J. Joiner, Steven A. Thomas, Roderic G. Eckenhoff, Amita Sehgal, Max B. Kelz

Abstract

One major unanswered question in neuroscience is how the brain transitions between conscious and unconscious states. General anesthetics offer a controllable means to study these transitions. Induction of anesthesia is commonly attributed to drug-induced global modulation of neuronal function, while emergence from anesthesia has been thought to occur passively, paralleling elimination of the anesthetic from its sites in the central nervous system (CNS). If this were true, then CNS anesthetic concentrations on induction and emergence would be indistinguishable. By generating anesthetic dose-response data in both insects and mammals, we demonstrate that the forward and reverse paths through which anesthetic-induced unconsciousness arises and dissipates are not identical. Instead they exhibit hysteresis that is not fully explained by pharmacokinetics as previously thought. Single gene mutations that affect sleep-wake states are shown to collapse or widen anesthetic hysteresis without obvious confounding effects on volatile anesthetic uptake, distribution, or metabolism. We propose a fundamental and biologically conserved concept of neural inertia, a tendency of the CNS to resist behavioral state transitions between conscious and unconscious states. We demonstrate that such a barrier separates wakeful and anesthetized states for multiple anesthetics in both flies and mice, and argue that it contributes to the hysteresis observed when the brain transitions between conscious and unconscious states.

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Mendeley readers

Mendeley readers

The data shown below were compiled from readership statistics for 154 Mendeley readers of this research output. Click here to see the associated Mendeley record.

Geographical breakdown

Country Count As %
United States 3 2%
Japan 2 1%
Korea, Republic of 1 <1%
Mexico 1 <1%
Spain 1 <1%
Unknown 146 95%

Demographic breakdown

Readers by professional status Count As %
Student > Ph. D. Student 29 19%
Researcher 26 17%
Student > Master 16 10%
Professor 14 9%
Professor > Associate Professor 13 8%
Other 41 27%
Unknown 15 10%
Readers by discipline Count As %
Medicine and Dentistry 37 24%
Agricultural and Biological Sciences 32 21%
Neuroscience 30 19%
Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology 6 4%
Psychology 6 4%
Other 16 10%
Unknown 27 18%