Patients undergoing sedation for brain MRI will be identified based on the surgical schedule . If no exclusion criteria are met, the child will be eligible for inclusion in the study, and both the child and their guardians will be informed, with consent requested and obtained.
Basic data regarding the patient's health status, age, sex, and weight will be collected and stored on a dedicated research computer.
The anesthesia procedure for MRI examinations routinely involves measuring blood pressure before administering premedication. A peripheral venous catheter (PVC) is then placed, after which the child is sedated with a propofol infusion (an anesthetic drug). Oxygen is routinely provided via nasal cannula. Standard monitoring includes heart rate, blood pressure, and blood oxygen saturation. All study participants will be prepared, sedated, and monitored according to this standard procedure, exactly as would be done regardless of whether they participate in the study or not.
Once the child is placed in the MRI scanner, the examination proceeds as per routine. Blood pressure is measured every five minutes. As soon as the mean arterial pressure (MAP) drops by more than 20% from baseline (i.e., the blood pressure measured when the patient was awake), brain blood flow measurement using an ASL sequence in the MRI machine will begin. ASL, or Arterial Spin Labeling, is a safe MRI technique for measuring cerebral blood flow without the need for contrast injection. This method magnetically "labels" the blood and then tracks its movement into the brain, providing valuable information about cerebral perfusion. ASL is already routinely used in children undergoing MRI for conditions such as epilepsy, brain tumors, and headaches.
The ASL sequence will be initiated immediately upon detecting the blood pressure drop. Subsequently, blood pressure will be managed according to clinical routine (this management will be performed regardless of study participation), and brain blood flow will be recorded during the ASL sequence. Clinical routine management primarily involves administering intravenous blood pressure-raising medications. The ASL sequence itself takes approximately 12 minutes. Once the study protocol is completed, the MRI examination and anesthesia/monitoring will continue as per routine until completion.
Data collected from the ASL scans will then be processed using specialized software for further analysis. ASL recording will begin upon detecting a \>20% drop in blood pressure, after which blood pressure will be treated according to routine. Normally, no pre-prepared blood pressure treatment is available, meaning it must be prepared at the time (e.g., blood pressure-raising medication). This preparation is estimated to take approximately 3 minutes, so the additional 12-minute sequence effectively extends the MRI duration by about (12-3) = 9 minutes (practically, this is expected to add around 10-15 extra minutes). In context, this additional time is negligible for the patient, as time windows of 10-15 minutes are common during MRI, for example, when waiting for image interpretation or adding new sequences (such as ASL, which is sometimes included for additional information, regardless of study participation).
The study will not result in an increased number of visits for research participants