Skip to Main Content

Anaesthesia training resources: Latest news & updates

This guide has been designed to support trainees participating in the ANZCA Anaesthesia Training Program, and contains resources intended to help support the overall training experience.

Understanding the Numbers in Depth of Anesthesia Monitors now available

by ANZCA Library Team on 2025-06-20T17:00:32+10:00 in Education: Anaesthesia training | 0 Comments
Cover Art Understanding the Numbers in Depth of Anesthesia Monitors by Ashraf A. Dahaba Is there a unified definition of anesthesia? What exactly are we monitoring? Processed electroencephalography (pEEG) monitors may not reliably assess all anesthetic endpoints. This book explains how anesthesiologists should not blindly follow the displayed numbers when they adjust their anesthetic agents' doses. This book is based on the author's 30 years of experience researching the topic of Depth of Anesthesia (DOA) monitoring. Depth of Anesthesia monitors are pEEG Monitors. All conditions that would alter the EEG (these are many) would also alter the DOA displayed numbers so each reader should learn how to correctly interpret the displayed numbers. In many instances physicians are confronted with various paradoxical Depth of Anesthesia monitors displaying inaccurate readings that do not concur with "clinically judged Anesthetic state" whether arising from an underlying pathophysiology alteration of the patients' own EEG cerebral function or those due to shortcomings in the performance and design of the DoA. This book - very easy to read although the topic sounds very complicated - would like to represent a reference where anesthesiologists can go back to when they are confronted with such situations. Each chapter is focused on one contributing element that could influence depth of anesthesia monitoring. It reports cases or studies of displayed numbers that do not concur with clinically assessed depth of anesthesia; these are immediately followed by the documented scientific EEG explanations. A book that both younger and older anesthetists should read to better understand how to use DOA monitors in their daily practice and that very much simplifies the topic.
ISBN: 9783031882593
Publication Date: 2025-05-29

 Add a Comment

0 Comments.

  Return to Blog
This post is closed for further discussion.

Quick links

CPD online portfolio

ANZCA Training Portfolio System

FPM Training ePortfolio

Learn@ANZCA

Professional documents

Member Portal

RGA Training ePortfolio

ANZCA Connect

Doctors' helpline

Clinical job vacancies

About ANZCA

Faculty of Pain Medicine

Chapter of Perioperative Medicine

ANZCA Foundation

ANZCA Clinical Trials Network

Geoffrey Kaye Museum

Connect with us

ANZCA

instagram

bluesky

facebook

youtube

linkedin

FPM

bluesky

youtube

linkedin


The college acknowledges the Traditional Custodians of Country throughout Australia and recognises their unique cultural and spiritual relationships to the land, waters and seas and their rich contribution to society. We pay our respects to ancestors and Elders, past, present and emerging.
The college acknowledges and respects Māori as the Tangata Whenua of Aotearoa and is committed to upholding the principles of the Te Tiriti o Waitangi, fostering the college’s relationship with Māori, supporting Māori fellows and trainees, and striving to improve the health of Māori.
The college recognises the special relationship between the Pacific peoples of New Zealand, Australia and the Pacific, and is committed to supporting those fellows and trainees of ANZCA, and improving the health of Pacific peoples.


Copyright © Australian and New Zealand College of Anaesthetists.