Awake Craniotomy: Basics & Goals - Eloquent Essentials
- Definition: Neurosurgical procedure where the patient is intentionally awake for crucial parts, enabling real-time functional brain mapping.
- Primary Goal: Achieve maximal lesion resection (e.g., tumors) while meticulously preserving eloquent brain functions like speech and motor control.
- Key Indications: Resection of lesions (gliomas, AVMs, epileptic foci) located in or near critical brain regions (eloquent cortex).
- Anesthetic Technique: Typically Asleep-Awake-Asleep (AAA) or conscious sedation; effective scalp nerve blocks are essential for patient comfort and cooperation.
- Eloquent Areas Targeted for Preservation:
- Motor Cortex (e.g., hand, face movement)
- Sensory Cortex
- Language Areas: Broca’s (expressive speech), Wernicke’s (receptive speech)
- Mapping Method: Direct Cortical Stimulation (DCS) is the gold standard to identify functional boundaries intraoperatively.
⭐ Awake craniotomy allows for dynamic assessment of neurological function, significantly improving the safety margin and extent of resection when operating near critical brain structures, thereby reducing postoperative deficits.
Preoperative Blueprint - Mind Matters Prep
- Patient Selection: Crucial. Cooperative, motivated, BMI < 35 kg/m², no severe anxiety/claustrophobia, understands procedure.
- Airway Assessment: Standard; anticipate potential GA conversion.
- Neurological Baseline: Document deficits, seizure history, eloquent areas.
- Psychological Preparation: Detailed counseling, manage expectations, patient's active role.
- Medication Management:
- Stop anticoagulants/antiplatelets per guidelines.
- Continue anti-epileptics (ensure therapeutic levels).
- Consider steroids for tumor edema.
- Fasting: Standard NPO guidelines.
- Informed Consent: Specific for awake technique, potential conversion to GA, intraop awareness/discomfort, possible seizures.
- Team Briefing: Clear roles (surgeon, anesthesia, neurophysiology).
⭐ Meticulous patient selection and thorough psychological preparation are paramount for a successful awake craniotomy.
Anesthetic Techniques - The Conscious Cranium
- Goal: Patient awake, comfortable, cooperative for neurological testing (speech, motor).
- Main Approaches:
- Asleep-Awake-Asleep (AAA):
- Phase 1 (Asleep): GA for craniotomy, dural opening. LMA common.
- Phase 2 (Awake): Anesthetics stopped for mapping.
- Phase 3 (Asleep): GA resumed for closure.
- Monitored Anesthesia Care (MAC):
- Conscious sedation throughout. Scalp blocks essential.
- Agents: Dexmedetomidine, low-dose Propofol.
- Asleep-Awake-Asleep (AAA):
- Scalp Block: Targets supraorbital, supratrochlear, auriculotemporal, occipital nerves.

- Key Drugs:
- AAA (Asleep): Propofol, Remifentanil.
- Awake/MAC: Dexmedetomidine (ideal), small Propofol/Remifentanil doses.
- Avoid: Benzodiazepines, high-dose opioids during awake phase.
- Airway: LMA for AAA (easy removal); ETT if risk.
- Adjuncts: Antiemetics, seizure prophylaxis (e.g., Levetiracetam 10-20 mg/kg).
⭐ Dexmedetomidine provides cooperative sedation with analgesia and minimal respiratory depression, ideal for the awake phase.
Intraoperative Management - Navigating Neuro
- Core Monitoring: Standard ASA + ECoG, direct cortical stimulation (DCS).
- Anesthetic Goals: Hemodynamic stability (MAP ±20% baseline), slack brain, cooperative patient for mapping, smooth transitions.
- Techniques:
- Asleep-Awake-Asleep (AAA): GA → LMA/ETT → Awaken for mapping → Resedate for closure.
- MAC: Dexmedetomidine, propofol, remifentanil + Scalp block. Avoid benzodiazepines.
- Key Events & Rx:
- Brain Swell: Mannitol 0.5-1 g/kg, PaCO2 30-35 mmHg.
- Seizures (5-15%): Cold saline, propofol, levetiracetam.
- Pain/Agitation: Opioids, ↑sedation (if not mapping).

⭐ Prophylactic antiepileptics (e.g., levetiracetam) are often given; if seizures occur, irrigate with cold saline and administer IV propofol or thiopental an anticonvulsant like levetiracetam if not already given, or a fast-acting agent like propofol or thiopental.
High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways
- Awake craniotomy maximizes lesion resection while preserving neurological function, especially in eloquent brain areas.
- Key indications: eloquent cortex tumors (e.g., speech, motor areas), and epilepsy surgery.
- Asleep-Awake-Asleep (AAA) is the standard technique; Laryngeal Mask Airway (LMA) often preferred.
- Scalp nerve blocks are crucial for pain control; dexmedetomidine is favored for conscious sedation.
- Intraoperative brain mapping (direct cortical stimulation) is essential to guide safe resection.
- Major risks include seizures, airway compromise, hypertension, and nausea/vomiting.
- Careful patient selection, psychological preparation, and cooperation are paramount for success.
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