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Anaesthetic neurotoxicity and neuroplasticity: an expert group report and statement based on the BJA Salzburg Seminar

TLDR
mounting evidence from preclinical studies reveals general anaesthetics to be powerful modulators of neuronal development and function, which could contribute to detrimental behavioural outcomes, however, definitive clinical data remain elusive.
Abstract
Although previously considered entirely reversible, general anaesthesia is now being viewed as a potentially significant risk to cognitive performance at both extremes of age. A large body of preclinical as well as some retrospective clinical evidence suggest that exposure to general anaesthesia could be detrimental to cognitive development in young subjects, and might also contribute to accelerated cognitive decline in the elderly. A group of experts in anaesthetic neuropharmacology and neurotoxicity convened in Salzburg, Austria for the BJA Salzburg Seminar on Anaesthetic Neurotoxicity and Neuroplasticity. This focused workshop was sponsored by the British Journal of Anaesthesia to review and critically assess currently available evidence from animal and human studies, and to consider the direction of future research. It was concluded that mounting evidence from preclinical studies reveals general anaesthetics to be powerful modulators of neuronal development and function, which could contribute to detrimental behavioural outcomes. However, definitive clinical data remain elusive. Since general anaesthesia often cannot be avoided regardless of patient age, it is important to understand the complex mechanisms and effects involved in anaesthesia-induced neurotoxicity, and to develop strategies for avoiding or limiting potential brain injury through evidence-based approaches.

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Mild hypothermia fails to protect infant macaques from brain injury caused by prolonged exposure to Antiseizure drugs

TL;DR: In this paper , the authors explored whether mild hypothermia might protect infant nonhuman primates from neuro-and gliotoxicity of phenobarbital and midazolam (Pb/M) for 24 hours.
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Anesthésies répétées en oncopédiatrie : spécificités, sécurité, impact

TL;DR: Le risque vital lie aux anesthesies repetees est faible, s’accumulent des donnees suggerant une neurotoxicite des agents anesthesiques pouvant impacter le developpement neurocognitif a long terme dans d’excellentes conditions de tolerance et de securite.
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Neonatal exposure to the experimental environment or ketamine can induce long-term learning dysfunction or overmyelination in female but not male rats

TL;DR: The results suggested that neonatal female rats exposed to multiple episodes of the experimental environment can develop learning dysfunction in adulthood, which may result from overmyelination in the mPFC, but male rats were not affected.
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A primordial target: Mitochondria mediate both primary and collateral anesthetic effects of volatile anesthetics

TL;DR: In this paper , it was shown that mitochondria may harbor the upstream molecular switch activating both primary and collateral effects of volatile anesthetics. But, the authors did not identify the critical targets of VAs mediating either the phenotype of "anesthesia" or their collateral effects.
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