Recent Stories
- Geography student sets up film company
- Eco-innovation businesses invited to attend pioneering project launch
- First Science and Technology Business Partnerships and Enterprise Annual Report 2011-2012 available to download now
- Lancaster University Coffeemat Challenge won by Science and Technology student Seb
- Competition finalists to present at the House of Commons
- Free talks from Lancaster University statisticians
- Doctoral Scholarships in Computer Science and Communication Systems
- Soil expert seeks effective management of revolutionary land use changes
- International Collaboration Prize for First Unified EU-Russia Flight Analysis Project
- 'Making Sense of Microposts' Workshop Accepted for WWW2013
Understanding Anaesthesia
Story supplied by LU Press Office
Researchers from the Physics Department are spearheading a project, which has the potential to shed light on the mysteries of anaesthesia.
Anaesthesiology is a subtle and imperfect science that is not currently well understood. Without it most modern surgical procedures would be impossible but the mechanisms causing loss of consciousness are not clear. This can result in complications such as a patient regaining consciousness during an operation or, in the most extreme circumstances, death.
The Lancaster University-led BRACCIA project is exploring ways in which the brain's electrical activity varies with the depth of anaesthesia and how waves present in these electrical signals interact with heart and respiration rhythms.
Changes in these three signals, and how they interact with one another, can be used to provide a crucial insight into the changes taking place in the human body during anaesthesia.
The ultimate aim of the project - which is backed by a ?1.42 million grant from the European Commission - is to develop the understanding needed to create a new, effective anaesthetic monitor which could be used in operating theatres to keep track of a patient's level of consciousness.
Medical Physicists at Lancaster University are co-coordinating an international team including physicists, biomedical engineers, information scientists, physiologists, neuroscientists and anaesthesiologists working within the Czech Republic, Germany, Norway, Slovenia and Switzerland as well as the UK.
More than 140 patients undergoing surgery will be monitored at both the Ulleval Hospital in Oslo and at the Royal Lancaster Infirmary, Lancaster. The volunteers will have their brain, heart and respiratory signals monitored and recorded before during and after anaesthesia. This should give researchers important information about the progression from unconsciousness to consciousness.
The research will also bring new insights into relationships between brain, heart and breathing - exploring how they interact and which function is driving the others.
Data collected during these experiments will be monitored and interpreted at Lancaster University using some of the latest analysis techniques under development by other BRACCIA partners.
Project scientific coordinator Dr Aneta Stefanovska, of Lancaster University's Physics Department, on whose earlier research in Ljubljana the whole project is based, said: "This is ground breaking research using nonlinear dynamics to deepen our understanding of the body and how its systems interact. This new knowledge has a very clear application and we hope it could eventually be used to develop a failsafe system for measuring anaesthesia levels in patients. It would also enable us to explore the effects of anaesthetic drugs on consciousness."
Professor Peter McClintock, also of Lancaster University's Physics Department, said: "This is a very exciting project, and a wonderful note on which to introduce our new undergraduate degree schemes in Physics with Medical Physics."
Professor Andrew Smith of the Royal Lancaster Infirmary said: "'Unintentional awareness - that is, when anaesthetised patients are awake when they should be asleep - is an uncommon but potentially traumatic complication. There are a number of electronic monitors available to assist anaesthetists in trying to avoid this problem, but none is 100 per cent reliable. We hope that BRACCIA will help us shed light on how the brain's activity changes during anaesthesia and in the future this may go some way towards developing a more reliable monitor of depth of anaesthesia."
Thu 22 June 2006
Associated Links
Latest News
Geography student sets up film company
It is well known that Geography graduates are highly employable and use their degrees in many different ways. One of the more unusual we have heard about recently is Lancaster geographer Greg Tomaszewicz who has set up his own Video Production Company - Lanor Productions.
Story supplied by LU Press Office
Fri 22 February 2013
Eco-innovation businesses invited to attend pioneering project launch
Ambitious North West SMEs keen to drive forward eco-innovative ideas and products are invited to a major event in Manchester on March 4.
Story supplied by LU Press Office
Thu 21 February 2013
First Science and Technology Business Partnerships and Enterprise Annual Report 2011-2012 available to download now
2011-2012 saw the development of a new theme-based strategy for Business Partnerships and Enterprise in Science and Technology. The seven interdisciplinary themes are: Advanced Manufacturing, Energy, Environment, Health and Human Development, Information and Communication Technologies, Quantum Technology and Security. Each theme has dedicated professional staff to work with businesses and source the expertise they need.
Tue 19 February 2013
Lancaster University Coffeemat Challenge won by Science and Technology student Seb
The concept of a new university website, complete with mobile application, to capture the campus social scene at a glance, earned an enterprising student an iPad.
Story supplied by LU Press Office
Tue 19 February 2013