08 May
2026
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ABCMEDIA
Human brain doesn’t shut down under anaesthesia, study finds

Human brain doesn’t shut down under anaesthesia, study finds

Even under anaesthesia, some parts of the brain remain active and can identify and process language, a study has found, according to Euronews.

The results, published in the journal Nature, found that neural circuits continue to encode and respond to stimuli even without consciousness.

“Even when patients are fully anaesthetised, their brains continue to analyse the world around them,” Sameer Sheth, co-author of the study at Baylor College of Medicine, said.

The researchers studied seven patients undergoing epilepsy surgery to remove part of their temporal lobe to control seizures.

In a first test, patients listened to a sequence of identical tones occasionally interrupted by a different one. Around 71% of the neurons responded to the sound, suggesting the brain was registering the tones being played, and 25% of them reacted to the different tones.

In another experiment, researchers played podcasts to four patients. They found that the brain processed speech in real time, responding to individual words and different elements of speech.

They also found that the brain, even in an unconscious state, was able to anticipate upcoming words based on prior context.

The study’s authors noted that more research is needed to better understand the brain’s activity under anaesthesia and whether the level of neural activity observed in the study can also be found during sleep or other unconscious states.

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