Strange
Discussion
According to Brown, anesthetic drugs cause brain circuits to change their oscillation patterns in particular ways, thereby preventing neurons in different brain regions from communicating with each other. The result is a loss of consciousness—an unnatural state that he compares to a “reversible coma”—that differs from sleep. The oscillations vary, he explains, based on the type and amount of anesthetic used and the age of the patient’s brain (since brains age at different rates).
The EEG of someone under anesthesia looks quite distinct from any of the normal brain states (stage 1, stage 2, REM, or slow wave sleep). If anesthesia is deep enough, you see a pattern on EEG called burst suppression, which means bursts of electrical activity interspersed with periods where activity is almost completely suppressed. If anesthesia is deep enough, the bursts disappear completely.
https://eegatlas-online.com/index.php/en/alphabetical-index/burst-suppression-guest