The effect of preoperative suggestions on perioperative dreams and dream recalls after
administration of different general anesthetic combinations: a randomized trial in
maxillofacial surgery
Background
Images evoked immediately before the induction of anesthesia with the help of suggestions
may influence dreaming during anesthesia.The aim of the study was to assess the incidence
of evoked dreams and dream recalls by employing suggestions before induction of anesthesia
while administering different general anesthetic combinations.
Methods
This is a single center, prospective randomized including 270 adult patients scheduled
for maxillofacial surgical interventions.Patients were assigned to control, suggestion
and dreamfilm groups according to the psychological method used. According to the
anesthetic protocol there were also three subgroups: etomidate & sevoflurane, propofol
& sevoflurane, propofol & propofol groups. Primary outcome measure was the incidence
of postoperative dreams in the non-intervention group and in the three groups receiving
different psychological interventions. Secondary endpoint was to test the effect of
perioperative suggestions and dreamfilm-formation training on the occurrance of dreams
and recallable dreams in different general anesthesiological techniques.
Results
Dream incidence rates measured in the control group did not differ significantly (etomidate
& sevoflurane: 40%, propofol & sevoflurane: 26%, propofol & propofol: 39%). A significant
increase could be observed in the incidence rate of dreams between the control and
suggestion groups in the propofol & sevoflurane (26%-52%) group (p = 0.023). There
was a significant difference in the incidence of dreams between the control and dreamfilm
subgroup in the propofol & sevoflurane (26% vs. 57%), and in the propofol & propofol
group (39% vs.70%) (p = 0.010, and p = 0.009, respectively). Similar to this, there
was a significant difference in dream incidence between the dreamfilm and the suggestion
subgroups (44% vs. 70%) in the propofol & propofol group (p = 0.019). Propofol as
an induction agent contributed most to dream formation and recalls (chi2-test p value:
0.005). The content of images and dreams evoked using suggestions showed great agreement
using all three anesthetic protocols.
Conclusion
The psychological method influenced dreaming during anesthesia. The increase of the
incidence rate of dreams was dependent on the anesthetic agent used, especially the
induction agent.
The study was registered in ClinicalTrials.gov. Identifier: NCT01839201.