Sleep and anesthesia resemble in many ways at a first glance.
The most prominent common feature of course is the loss of
consciousness, i.e. the loss of awareness of external stimuli.
However a closer look at the loss of consciousness reveals already
a difference between sleep and anesthesia: anesthesia is induced by
an anesthetic drug whereas we may fall asleep without external
cause. Other questions may arise about the difference of the two
effects: do we dream during surgery under anesthesia, do we feel
pain during sleep? Essentially, we may ask: what is common and what
are the differences between sleep and anesthesia? To answer these
questions, we may take a look at the neural origin of both effects
and the involved physiological pathways. In which way do they
resemble? Moreover, we ask what are the detailed features of normal
sleep and general anesthesia as applied during surgery and which
features exist in both phenomena? If yes in which way?
To receive answers to these questions, it is necessary to
consider several experimental techniques that reveal underlying
neural mechanisms of sleep and anesthesia. Moreover, theoretical
models of neural activity may model both phenomena and comes up
with predictions or even theories on the underlying mechanisms.
Such models may attack several different description levels, from
the microscopic level of single neurons to the macroscopic level of
neural populations. Such models may give deeper insight into the
phenomena if their assumptions are based on experimental findings
and their predictions can be compared to experimental results. This
comparison step is essential for valuable theoretical models.
The book is motivated by two successful workshops on anesthesia
and sleep organized
during the Computational Neuroscience Conferences in Toronto in
2007 and in Berlin 2009. It aims to cover all the previous aspects
with a focus on the link to experimental findings. It elucidates
important issues in theoretical models that at the same time
reflect some current major research interests. Moreover it
considers some diverse issues which are very important to get an
overview of the fields. For instance, the book discusses not only
neural activity in the brain but also the effects of general
anesthesia on the cardio-vascular system and the spinal cord in the
context of analgesia. In addition, it considers different
experimental techniques on various spatial scales, such as fMRI and
EEG-experiments on the macroscopic scale and single neuron and
LFP-measurements on the microscopic scale.
In total all book chapters reveal aspects of the neural
correlates of sleep and anesthesia motivated by experimental data.
This focus on the neural mechanism in the light of experimental
data is the common feature of the topics and the chapters. In
addition, the book aims to clarify the shared physiological
mechanisms of both phenomena, but also reveal their physiological
differences.
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