Volume 21, Issue 3 , Pages 385-401, September 2007
Unconscious memory formation during anaesthesia
Do patients form memories of intra-operative events when they are adequately anaesthetized? Studies of memory priming during anaesthesia with depth or awareness monitoring provide some evidence that they do, although only the most basic form of memory function, perceptual priming, persists when patients are unconscious. The probability of memory encoding increases as depth of anaesthesia decreases. There is a theoretical possibility that patients can be adversely affected, through memory priming, by comments made in the operating theatre, and some evidence that positive intra-operative suggestions can benefit patients.
Key words: implicit memory, explicit memory, depth of anaesthesia, priming, awareness, consciousness
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PII: S1521-6896(07)00039-0
doi:10.1016/j.bpa.2007.04.006
© 2007 Published by Elsevier Inc.
Volume 21, Issue 3 , Pages 385-401, September 2007
