Most studies of awareness under general anaesthesia use the ability to resp
ond to a verbal command as the primary measure of consciousness. The aim of
this pilot study was to discover whether it was possible for subjects reco
vering from a propofol general anaesthetic to experience conscious awarenes
s without the capability of responding to verbal command Ten healthy volunt
eers received an intravenous propofol infusion (1500 mg/hr) until they were
no longer conscious. The infusion was then stopped and they were given ver
bal commands interspersed with random numbers from a recorded tape until th
ey were able to respond appropriately. Seven of the subjects were able to r
emember numbers corresponding to times 10 to 40 seconds before they respond
ed to verbal command. In none of these subjects was there recall of the num
ber 30 minutes later:
We concluded that there is an ability to have conscious awareness of audito
ry input without necessarily being able to demonstrate this by responding t
o verbal command.