Propofol amnesia - What is going on in the brain? Journal Article


Authors: Veselis, R. A.; Pryor, K. O.
Article Title: Propofol amnesia - What is going on in the brain?
Title Series: Contemporary Clinical Neuroscience
Abstract: By necessity, all anesthetic drugs produce amnesia (lack of memory) at high enough concentrations. However, certain amnesic drugs, exemplified by propofol or midazolam, produce dense amnesia at low drug concentrations while a person is still awake. This chapter reviews human memory systems, with a focus on episodic memory. This memory system is the one most affected by amnesic drugs. It is also the one most difficult to define and study in animal models. Potential mechanisms by which amnesia is produced in humans are defined in this chapter using propofol as an exemplar drug. Episodic memory is considered in terms of information flow from the outside world into long-term memory. Propofol has little effect on encoding, thus permitting memories to be formed in its presence. However, these memories are quickly forgotten, and electrophysiologic measures (event-related potentials, ERPs) of recognition memory reveal effects of propofol on memory within seconds of encoding. Potential targets for propofol's amnesic actions on the chain of physiologic events activated by learning, termed consolidation, are discussed.
Keywords: episodic memory; event-related potential
Journal Title: Contemporary Clinical Neuroscience
ISSN: 2627-535X
Publisher: Humana Press Inc  
Date Published: 2010-01-01
Start Page: 215
End Page: 243
Language: English
DOI: 10.1007/978-1-60761-462-3_11
ACCESSION: BIOSIS:PREV201000217258
PROVIDER: biosis
Notes: Book Chapter: 11 -- Published in "Suppressing the Mind: Anesthetic Modulation of Memory and Consciousness" (ISBN: 978-1-60761-463-0) -- "Source: Biosis"
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  1. Robert A Veselis
    98 Veselis
  2. Kane Pryor
    8 Pryor