76 research outputs found
Quantification of depth of anesthesia by nonlinear time series analysis of brain electrical activity
We investigate several quantifiers of the electroencephalogram (EEG) signal
with respect to their ability to indicate depth of anesthesia. For 17 patients
anesthetized with Sevoflurane, three established measures (two spectral and one
based on the bispectrum), as well as a phase space based nonlinear correlation
index were computed from consecutive EEG epochs. In absence of an independent
way to determine anesthesia depth, the standard was derived from measured blood
plasma concentrations of the anesthetic via a pharmacokinetic/pharmacodynamic
model for the estimated effective brain concentration of Sevoflurane. In most
patients, the highest correlation is observed for the nonlinear correlation
index D*. In contrast to spectral measures, D* is found to decrease
monotonically with increasing (estimated) depth of anesthesia, even when a
"burst-suppression" pattern occurs in the EEG. The findings show the potential
for applications of concepts derived from the theory of nonlinear dynamics,
even if little can be assumed about the process under investigation.Comment: 7 pages, 5 figure
Personalized Drug Dosage – Closing the Loop
A brief account is given of various approaches
to the individualization of drug dosage, including the use of
pharmacodynamic markers, therapeutic monitoring of plasma
drug concentrations, genotyping, computer-guided dosage
using ‘dashboards’, and automatic closed-loop control of
pharmacological action. The potential for linking the real patient
to his or her ‘virtual twin’ through the application of
physiologically-based pharmacokinetic modeling is also
discussed
Tikhonov adaptively regularized gamma variate fitting to assess plasma clearance of inert renal markers
The Tk-GV model fits Gamma Variates (GV) to data by Tikhonov regularization (Tk) with shrinkage constant, λ, chosen to minimize the relative error in plasma clearance, CL (ml/min). Using 169Yb-DTPA and 99mTc-DTPA (n = 46, 8–9 samples, 5–240 min) bolus-dilution curves, results were obtained for fit methods: (1) Ordinary Least Squares (OLS) one and two exponential term (E1 and E2), (2) OLS-GV and (3) Tk-GV. Four tests examined the fit results for: (1) physicality of ranges of model parameters, (2) effects on parameter values when different data subsets are fit, (3) characterization of residuals, and (4) extrapolative error and agreement with published correction factors. Test 1 showed physical Tk-GV results, where OLS-GV fits sometimes-produced nonphysical CL. Test 2 showed the Tk-GV model produced good results with 4 or more samples drawn between 10 and 240 min. Test 3 showed that E1 and E2 failed goodness-of-fit testing whereas GV fits for t > 20 min were acceptably good. Test 4 showed CLTk-GV clearance values agreed with published CL corrections with the general result that CLE1 > CLE2 > CLTk-GV and finally that CLTk-GV were considerably more robust, precise and accurate than CLE2, and should replace the use of CLE2 for these renal markers
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