Title: General Anesthetics
1General Anesthetics
Michael H. Ossipov, Ph.D. Department of
Pharmacology
2Surgery Before Anesthesia
3Fun and Frolics led to Early Anesthesia
4History of Anesthesia (150 years old)
Joseph Priestly discovers N2O in 1773 Crawford
W. Long 1842. Country Dr. in Georgia first used
ether for neck surgery. Did not publicize, in
part because of concerns about negative fallout
from frolics. Tried to claim credit after
Mortons demonstration but Important lesson
learned if you dont publish it, it didnt
happen. Sir Humphrey Davy experimented with
N2O, reported loss of pain, euphoria Traveling
shows with N2O (1830s 1840s) Colt (of Colt
45 fame) Horace Wells 1844. Demonstrated N2O for
tooth extraction deemed a failure because
patient reacted.
5History of Anesthesia
William Morton, dentist first demonstration of
successful surgical anesthesia with ether
1846 John C. Warren, surgeon at MGH says
Gentlemen, this is no humbug! birth of modern
anesthesia Dr. John Snow administers chloroform
to Queen Victoria (1853) popularizes anesthesia
for childbirth in UK He becomes the first
anesthesia specialist. Note that ether became
anesthesia of choice in US, chloroform in UK
6Anesthesia
- Allow surgical, obstetrical and diagnostic
procedures to be performed in a manner which is
painless to the patient - Allow control of factors such as physiologic
functions and patient movement
7Anesthetic techniques
- General anesthesia
- Regional anesthesia
- Local anesthesia
- Conscious Sedation (monitored anesthesia care)
8What is Anesthesia
- No universally accepted definition
- Usually thought to consist of
- Oblivion
- Amnesia
- Analgesia
- Lack of Movement
- Hemodynamic Stability
9What is Anesthesia
- Sensory
- -Absence of intraoperative pain
- Cognitive
- -Absence of intraoperative awareness
- -Absence of recall of intraoperative events
- Motor
- -Absence of movement
- -Adequate muscular relaxation
- Autonomic
- -Absence of hemodynamic response
- -Absence of tearing, flushing, sweating
10Goals of General Anesthesia
- Hypnosis (unconsciousness)
- Amnesia
- Analgesia
- Immobility/decreased muscle tone
- (relaxation of skeletal muscle)
- Inhibition of nociceptive reflexes
- Reduction of certain autonomic reflexes
- (gag reflex, tachycardia, vasoconstriction)
11Desired Effects Of General Anesthesia (Balanced
Anesthesia)
- Rapid induction
- Sleep
- Analgesia
- Secretion control
- Muscle relaxation
- Rapid reversal
12Phases of General Anesthesia
Stages Of General Anesthesia
- Induction- initial entry to surgical anesthesia
- Maintenance- continuous monitoring and medication
- Maintain depth of anesthesia, ventilation, fluid
balance, hemodynamic control, hoemostasis - Emergence- resumption of normal CNS function
- Extubation, resumption of normal respiration
13Stages Of General Anesthesia
Phases of General Anesthesia
Stage I Disorientation, altered
consciousness Stage II Excitatory stage,
delirium, uncontrolled movement, irregular
breathing. Goal is to move through this stage as
rapidly as possible. Stage III Surgical
anesthesia return of regular respiration. Plane
1 light anesthesia, reflexes, swallowing
reflexes. Plane 2 Loss of blink reflex,
regular respiration (diaphragmatic and chest).
Surgical procedures can be performed at this
stage. Plane 3 Deep anesthesia. Shallow
breathing, assisted ventilation needed. Level of
anesthesia for painful surgeries (e.g. abdominal
exploratory procedures). Plane 4 Diaphragmatic
respiration only, assisted ventilation is
required. Cardiovascular impairment. Stage IV
Too deep essentially an overdose and represents
anesthetic crisis. This is the stage between
respiratory arrest and death due to circulatory
collapse.
14Routes of Induction
- Intravenous
- Safe, pleasant and rapid
- Mask
- Common for children under 10
- Most inhalational agents are pungent, evoke
coughing and gagging - Avoids the need to start an intravenous catheter
before induction of anesthesia - Patients may receive oral sedation for separation
from parents/caregivers - Intramuscular
- Used in uncooperative patients
15Anesthetic Techniques
- Inhalation anesthesia
- Anesthetics in gaseous state are taken up by
inhalation - Total intravenous anesthesia
- Inhalation plus intravenous (Balanced
Anesthesia) - Most common
16Anesthetic drugs have rapid onset and offset
- Minute to minute control is the holy grail of
general anesthesia - Allows rapid adjustment of the depth of
anesthesia - Ability to awaken the patient promptly at the end
of the surgical procedure - Requires inhalation anesthetics and short-acting
intravenous drugs
17Anesthetic Depth
- During the maintenance phase, anesthetic doses
are adjusted based upon signs of the depth of
anesthesia - Most important parameter for monitoring is blood
pressure - There is no proven monitor of consciousness
18Selection of anesthetic technique
- Safest for the patient
- Appropriate duration
- i.v. induction agents for short procedures
- Facilitates surgical procedure
- Most acceptable to the patient
- General vs. regional techniques
- Associated costs
19MAC Minimal Alveolar Concentration
- "The alveolar concentration of an inhaled
anesthetic that prevents movement in 50 of
patients in response to a standardized stimulus
(eg, surgical incision)." - A measure of relative potency and standard for
experimental studies. - MAC values remain constant regardless of stimuli,
weight, sex, and even across species - Steep DRC 50 respond at 1 MAC but 99 at 1.3
MAC - MAC values for different agents are approximately
additive. (0.7 MAC N2O 0.6 MAC halothane 1.3
MAC total) - "MAC awake," (when 50 of patients open their
eyes on request) is approximately 0.3. - Light anesthesia is 0.8 to 1.2 MAC, often
supplemented with adjuvant i.v. drugs
20Factors Affecting MAC
- Circadian rhythm
- Body temperature
- Age
- Other drugs
- Prior use
- Recent use
21How do Inhalational Anesthetics Work?
- Surprisingly, the mechanism of action is still
largely unknown. - "Anesthetics have been used for 160 years, and
how they work is one of the great mysteries of
neuroscience," James Sonner, M.D. (UCSF) - Anesthesia research "has been for a long time a
science of untestable hypotheses," Neil L.
Harrison, M.D. (Cornell University)
22How do Inhalational Anesthetics Work?
Meyer-Overton observation There is a strong
linear correlation between lipid solubility and
anesthetic potency (MAC)
23How do Inhalational Anesthetics Work?
- Membrane Stabilization Theory
- Site of action in lipid phase of cell membranes
(membrane stabilizing effect) or - Hydrophobic regions of membrane-bound proteins
- May induce transition from gel to liquid
crystalline state of phospholipids - Supported by NMR and electron-spin resonance
studies - Anesthesia can be reduced by high pressure
24How do Inhalational Anesthetics Work?
- Promiscuous Receptor Agonist Theory Anesthetics
may act at GABA receptors, NMDA receptors, other
receptors - May act directly on ion channels
- May act in hydrophobic pouches of proteins
associated with receptors - May effect allosteric interaction to alter
affinity for ligands - Immobility is due to a spinal mechanism, but site
is unknown - Overall, the data can be explained by supposing
that the primary target sites underlying general
anesthesia are amphiphilic pockets of
circumscribed dimensions on particularly
sensitive proteins in the central nervous
system. Franks and Lieb, Environmental Health
Perspectives 87199-205, 1990.
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26Receptors Possibly Mediating CNS Effects Of
Inhaled Anesthetics
- Potentiation of inhibitory receptors
- GABAA
- Glycine
- Potassium channels
- Inhibition of excitatory receptors
- NMDA (glutamate)
- AMPA (glutamate)
- Nicotinic acetylcholine
- Sodium channels
Inferred from demonstration of effect on receptor
at clinically relevant concentrations and lack of
effect in absence of receptor
27Inhaled Anesthetics
- Gases
- Nitrous oxide
- Present in the gaseous state at room temperature
and pressure - Supplied as compressed gas
28Inhaled Anesthetics
- Volatile anesthetics
- Present as liquids at room temperature and
pressure - Vaporized into gases for administration
29Inhaled Anesthetics
- Volatile anesthetics
- Present as liquids at room temperature and
pressure BUT NOT ALWAYS! - Vaporized into gases for administration
30Concentration of Inhaled Anesthetics Determines
Dose
- Partial pressure (mmHg)
- Applies to gas phase or to dissolved gases
- Volumes
- Percentage of total gas volume contributed by
anesthetic - Percentage of total gas molecules contributed by
anesthetic - Partial pressure/atmospheric pressure
31Solubility of Inhaled Anesthetics Determines Dose
and Time-course
- Ratio of concentration in one phase to that in a
second phase at equilibrium - Important solubility coefficients for inhaled
anesthetics - Lower blood-gas partition coefficient leads to
faster induction and emergence - Higher oil-gas partition coefficient leads to
increased potency
32Chemistry
(CF3)2CH-O-CH3 10, excellent anesthesia CF3CHFC
F2-O-CH3 5, light anesthesia,
tremors CF3CH2-O-CF2CH2F 3, convulsions CF3CH2
-O-CH2CF3 (Indoklon) 0.25, marked
convulsions CF3CF2-O-CF2CF3 Inert
From F.G. Rudo and J.C. Krantz, Br. J. Anaesth.
(1974), 46, 181
33Inhaled Anesthetics
34Inhaled Anesthetics - Historical
- Ether Slow onset, recovery, explosive
- Chloroform Slow onset, very toxic
- Cyclopropane Fast onset, but very explosive
- Halothane (Fluothane) first halogenated ether
(non-flammable) - 50 metabolism by P450, induction of hepatic
microsomal enzymes TFA, chloride, bromide
released - Myocardial depressant (SA node), sensitization of
myocardium to catecholamines - Hepatotoxic
- Methoxyflurane (Penthrane) - 50 to 70
metabolized - Diffuses into fatty tissue
- Releases fluoride, oxalic acid
- Renotoxic
35Inhaled Anesthetics Currently
- Enflurane (Ethrane) Rapid, smooth induction and
maintenance - 2-10 metabolized in liver
- Introduced as replacement for halothane,
canabilized to make way for isoflurane - Isoflurane (Forane) smooth and rapid induction
and emergence - Very little metabolism (0.2)
- Control of Cerebral blood flow and Intracranial
pressure - Potentiates muscle relaxants, Uterine relaxation
- CO maintained, arrhythmias uncommon, epinephrine
can be used with isoflurane Preferential
vasodilation of small coronary vessels can lead
to coronary steal - No reports of hepatotoxicity or renotoxicity
- Most widely employed
36Inhaled Anesthetics New Kids on the Block
- Desflurane (Suprane) Very fast onset and offset
(minute-to minute control) because of its low
solubility in blood - Differs from isoflurane by replacing one Cl with
F - Minimal metabolism
- Very pungent - breath holding, coughing, and
laryngeal spasm not used for induction - No change in cardiac output tachycardia with
rapid increase in concentration, No coronary
steal - Degrades to form CO in dessicated soda-lime
(Ba2OH /NaOH/KOH not Ca2OH) - Fast recovery responsive within 5-10 minutes
37Inhaled Anesthetics New Kids on the Block
- Sevoflurane (Ultane) Low solubility and low
pungency excellent induction agent - Significant metabolism (5 10x gt isoflurane)
forms inorganic fluoride and hexafluoroisoproprano
lol - No tachycardia, Prolong Q-T interval, reduce CO,
little tachycardia - Soda-lime (not Ca2OH) degrades sevoflurane into
Compound A - Nephrotoxic in rats
- Occurs with dessicated CO2 absorbant
- Increased at higher temp, high conc, time
- No evidence of clinical toxicity
- Metallic/environmental impurities can form HF
38Inhaled Anesthetics Currently
- Nitrous Oxide is still widely used
- Potent analgesic (NMDA antagonist)
- MAC 120
- Used ad adjunct to supplement other inhalationals
- Xenon
- Also a potent analgesia (NMDA antagonist)
- MAC is around 80
- Just an atom what about mechanism of action?
39Malignant Hyperthermia
Malignant hyperthermia (MH) is a pharmacogenetic
hypermetabolic state of skeletal muscle induced
in susceptible individuals by inhalational
anesthetics and/or succinylcholine (and maybe by
stress or exercise).
- Genetic susceptibility-Ca channel defect
(CACNA1S) or RYR1 (ryanodine receptor) - Excess calcium ion leads to excessive ATP
breakdown/depletion, lactate production,
increased CO2 production, increased VO2, and,
eventually, to myonecrosis and rhabdomyolysis,
arrhythmias, renal failure - May be fatal if not treated with dantrolene
increases reuptake of Ca in Sarcoplasmic
Reticulum - Signs tachycardia tachypnea ETCO2 increasing
metabolic acidosis also hyperthermia, muscle
rigidity, sweating, arrhythmia - Detection
- Caffeine-halothane contracture testing (CHCT) of
biopsied muscle - Genetic testing for 19 known mutations associated
with MH
40Intravenous Anesthetics
- Most exert their actions by potentiating GABAA
receptor - GABAergic actions may be similar to those of
volatile anesthetics, but act at different sites
on receptor - High-efficacy opiods (fentanyl series) also
employed - Malignant hyperthermia is NOT a factor with these
41Intravenous Anesthetics
42Organ Effects
- Most decrease cerebral metabolism and
intracranial pressure. Often used in the
treatment of patients at risk for cerebral
ischemia or intracranial hypertension. - Most cause respiratory depression
- May cause apnea after induction of anesthesia
43Cardiovascular Effects
- Barbiturates, benzodiazepines and propofol cause
cardiovascular depression. - Those drugs which do not typically depress the
cardiovascular system can do so in a patient who
is compromised but compensating using increased
sympathetic nervous system activity.
44Intravenous Anesthetics - Barbiturates
Ideal Rapid Onset, short-acting Thiopental
(pentathol)- previously almost universally
used For over 60 years was the standard against
which other injectable induction
agents/anesthetics were compared Others
Suritol (thiamylal) Brevital (methohexital) Act
at GABA receptors (inhibitory), potentiate
endogenous GABA activity at the receptor, direct
effect on Cl channel at higher concentrations. Ef
fect terminated not by metabolism but by
redistribution repeated administration or
prolonged infusion approached equlibrium at
redistribution sites. Redistribution not
effective in terminating action, led to many
deaths. Build-up in adipose tissue very long
emergence from anesthesia (e.g. one case took 4
days to emerge)
45Propofol (Diprivan)
- Originally formulated in egg lecithin emulsion
- anaphylactoid reactions
- Current formulation 1 propofol in 10 soybean
oil, 2.25 glycerol, 1.2 egg phosphatide - Pain on injection
- Onset within 1 minute of injection
- Not analgesic
- Enhances activity of GABA receptors (probably)
- Vasodilation, respiratory depression, apnea (25
to 40) - Induction and maintenance of anesthesia or
sedation - Rapid emergence from anesthesia
- Antiemetic effect
- Feeling of well-being
- Widely used for ambulatory surgery
46Etomidate (Amidate)
- Insoluble in water, formulated in 35 propylene
glycol (pain on injection) - Little respiratory depression
- Minimal cardiovascular effects
- Rapid induction (arm-to-brain time), duration 5
to 15 minutes - Most commonly used for induction of anesthesia in
patients with cardiovascular compromise or where
cardiovascular stability is most important - Metabolized to carboxylic acid, 85 excreted in
urine, 15 in bile - Rapid emergence from anesthesia
- Adverse effects Pain, emesis, involuntary
myoclonic movements, inhibition of adrenal
steroid synthesis
47Ketamine
- Chemically and pharmacologically related to PCP
- Inhibits NMDA receptors
- Analgesic, dissociative anesthesia
- Cataleptic appearance, eyes open, reflexes
intact, purposeless but coordinated movements - Stimulates sympathetic nervous system
- Indirectly stimulates cardiovascular system,
Direct myocardial depressant - Increases cerebral metabolism and intracranial
pressure - Lowers seizure threshold
- Psychomimetic emergence reactions
- vivid dreaming extracorporeal (floating
"out-of-body") experience misperceptions,
misinterpretations, illusions - may be associated with euphoria, excitement,
confusion, fear
48Benzodiazepines
- Diazepam (Valium, requires non-aqueous vehicle,
pain on injection) Replaced by Midazolam
(Versed) which is water-soluble. - Rapidly redistributed, but slowly metabolized
- Useful for sedation, amnesia
- Not analgesic, can be sole anesthetic for
non-painful procedures (endoscopies, cardiac
catheterization) - Does not produce surgical anesthesia alone
- Commonly used for preoperative sedation and
anxiolysis - Can be used for induction of anesthesia
- Safe minimal respiratory and cardiovascular
depression when used alone, but they can
potentiate effects of other anesthetics (e.g.
opioids) - Rapid administration can cause transient apnea
49Opioids
- i.v. fentanyl, sufentanil, alfentanil,
remifentanyl or morphine - Usually in combination with inhalant or
benzodiazepine - Respiratory depression, delayed recovery, nausea
and vomiting post-op - Little cardiovascular depression Provide more
stable hemodynamics - Smooth emergence (except for N V)
- Excellent Analgesic intra-operative analgesia
and decrease early postoperative pain - Remifentanil has ester linkage, metabolized
rapidly by nonspecific esterases (t1/2 4
minutes fentanyl t1/2 3.5 hours) - Rapid onset and recovery
- Recovery is independent of dose and duration
offers the high degree of minute to minute
control
50Conscious sedation
- A term used to describe sedation for diagnostic
and therapeutic procedures throughout the
hospital. - Ambiguous because no one really knows how to
measure consciousness in the setting of a patient
receiving sedation.
51Depth of sedation
52Conscious sedation
- Each health care facility should have policies
and procedures defining conscious sedation and
specifying the procedures and training required
for its use. - Before sedating patients one should review and
follow these policies and procedures. - One should also understand sedative medications
and have the knowledge and skills required for
the treatment of possible complications (e.g.
apnea).
53Conscious sedation
- The most common mistake is to over-sedate the
patient. If the patient is comfortable, there is
no need for more medication. - The safest method of sedation is to carefully
titrate sedative medications in divided doses. - Allow enough time between doses to assess the
effects of the previous dose. - Administer medications until the desired level of
sedation is reached, but not past the point where
the patient is capable of responding verbally. - Midazolam and fentanyl are among the easiest
drugs to use. Midazolam provides sedation and
anxiolysis and fentanyl provides analgesia.
54What is Balanced Anesthesia?
- Use specific drugs for each component
- Sensory
- N20, opioids, ketamine for analgesia
- Cognitive
- Produce amnesia, and preferably unconsciousness,
with N2O, .25-.5 MAC of an inhaled agent, or an
IV hypnotic (propofol, midazolam, diazepam,
thiopental) - Motor
- Muscle relaxants as needed
- Autonomic
- If sensory and cognitive components are adequate,
usually no additional medication will be needed
for autonomic stability. If some is needed,
often a beta blocker /- vasodilator is used.
55What is Balanced Anesthesia?
- Garbage Anesthesia (everything but the kitchen
sink) - LOT2 (Little Of This, Little of That)
- Mixed Technique
- The Usual
56MAC Reduction
Lang et al, Anesthesiology 85, 721-728, 1996
57Bolus Dose Equivalents
- Fentanyl 100 mg (1.5 mg/kg)
- Remifentanil 35 mg (0.5 mg/kg)
- Alfentanil 500 mg (7 mg/kg)
- Sufentanil 12 mg (0.2 mg/kg)
58What is the role of N2O?
- Excellent analgesic in sub-MAC doses
- MAC is around 110.
- MACasleep tends to be about 60 of MAC.
- MACasleep for N2O is 68-73
- Well tolerated by most patients but bad news if
you are subject to migraine. - At N2O concentrations of 70, there may be no
need for additional drugs to ensure lack of
awareness. - Has the fastest elimination of any hypnotic agent
used in anesthesia. - If you want your patients to wake up quickly,
keep them within N2O of being awake!
59Simple Combinations
- Morphine
- 10 mg iv 3-5 minutes prior to induction
- Additional 5 mg 45 minutes before the end of the
procedure, if it lasts longer than 2 hours - Propofol
- 2-3 mg/kg on induction
- N2O
- 70
- Sevoflurane
- 0.3-0.6
- Relaxant of choice
60Simple Combinations
- Fentanyl
- 75-150 on induction
- 25-50 mg now and then during the case
- Propofol
- 2-3 mg/kg on induction
- N2O
- 70
- Sevoflurane
- 0.3-0.6
- Relaxant of choice
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62Local/Regional Anesthetics
Michael H. Ossipov, Ph.D. Department of
Pharmacology
63General concepts
- Cocaine isolated from Erythroxylon coca plant in
Andes - Von Anrep (1880) discovers local anesthetic
property, suggests clinical use - Koller introduces cocaine in opthalmology
- Freud uses cocaine to wean Karl Koller off
morphine - Halstead demonstrates infiltration anesthesia
with cocaine - Rapidly accepted in dentistry
64General concepts
- Halstead (1885) shows cocaine blocks nerve
conduction in nerve trunks - Corning (1885) demonstrates spinal block in dogs
- 1905 Procaine (NOVOCAINE) synthesized
- analog of cocaine but without euphoric effects,
retains vasoconstrictor effect - Slow onset, fast offset, ester-type (allergic
reactions)
65General concepts
- First modern LA (1940s) lidocaine (lignocaine
in UK XYLOCAINE) - Amide type (hypoallergenic)
- Quick onset, fairly long duration (hrs)
- Most widely used local anesthetic in US today,
along with bupivacaine and tetracaine
66General concepts
- Cause transient and reversible loss of sensation
in a circumscribed area of the body - Very safe, almost no reports of permanent nerve
damage from local anesthetics - Interfere with nerve conduction
- Block all types of fibers (axons) in a nerve
(sensory, motor, autonomic)
67Local anesthetics Uses
- Topical anesthesia (cream, ointments, EMLA)
- Peripheral nerve blockade
- Intravenous regional anesthesia
- Spinal and epidural anesthesia
- Systemic uses (antiarrhythmics, treatment of pain
syndromes)
68Structure
- All local anesthetics are weak bases. They all
contain - An aromatic group (confers lipophilicity)
- - diffusion across membranes, duration,
toxicity increases with lipophilicity - An intermediate chain, either an ester or an
amide and - An amine group (confers hydrophilic properties)
- charged form is the major active form
69Structure
- Formulated as HCl salt (acidic) for solubility,
stability - But, uncharged (unprotonated N) form required to
traverse tissue to site of action - pH of formulation is irrelevant since drug ends
up in interstitial fluid - Quaternary analogs, low pH bathing medium
suggests major form active at site is cationic,
but both charged and uncharged species are active
70 O
?
COCH
H
N
CH
N
H
H
2
2
2
Nonionized base
Cationic acid
1.0
Base
Log
Lipoid barriers
(nerve sheath)
pH p
K
a
Acid
(Henderson-Hasselbalch equation)
Extracellular
Base Acid
1.0
fluid
For procaine (p
K
8.9)
a
at tissue pH (7.4)
Nerve membrane
3.1
Base
Axoplasm
Base Acid
2.5
0.03
Acid
71Structure
72Structure
73Mode of action
- Block sodium channels
- Bind to specific sites on channel protein
- Prevent formation of open channel
- Inhibit influx of sodium ions into the neuron
- Reduce depolarization of membrane in response to
action potential - Prevent propagation of action potential
74Mode of action
75Mode of action
76Mode of action
77Sensitivity of fiber types
- Unmyelinated are more sensitive than myelinated
nerve fibers - Smaller fibers are generally more sensitive than
large-diameter peripheral nerve trunks - Smaller fibers have smaller critical lengths
than larger fibers (mm range) - Accounts for faster onset, slower offset of local
anesthesia - Overlap between block of C-fibers and Ad-fibers.
78Choice of local anesthetics
- Onset
- Duration
- Regional anesthetic technique
- Sensory vs. motor block
- Potential for toxicity
79Clinical use
80Choice of local anesthetics
81Factors influencing anesthetic activity
- Needle in appropriate location (most important)
- Dose of local anesthetic
- Time since injection
- Use of vasoconstrictors
- pH adjustment
- Nerve block enhanced in pregnancy
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84Redistribution and metabolism
- Rapidly redistributed
- More slowly metabolized and eliminated
- Esters hydrolyzed by plasma cholinesterase
- Amides primarily metabolized in the liver
85Local anesthetic toxicity
- Allergy
- CNS toxicity
- Cardiovascular toxicity
86Allergy
- Ester local anesthetics may produce true allergic
reactions - Typically manifested as skin rashes or
bronchospasm. May be as severe as anaphylaxis - Due to metabolism to ?-aminobenzoic acid
- True allergic reactions to amides are extremely
rare.
87Systemic toxicity
- Results from high systemic levels
- First symptoms are generally CNS disturbances
(restlessness, tremor, convulsions) - treat with
benzodiazepines - Cardiovascular toxicity generally later
88CNS symptoms
- Tinnitus
- Lightheadedness, Dizziness
- Numbness of the mouth and tongue, metal taste in
the mouth - Muscle twitching
- Irrational behavior and speech
- Generalized seizures
- Coma
89Cardiovascular toxicity
- Depressed myocardial contractility
- Systemic vasodilation
- Hypotension
- Arrhythmias, including ventricular fibrillation
(bupivicaine)
90Avoiding systemic toxicity
- Use acceptable total dose
- Avoid intravascular administration (aspirate
before injecting) - Administer drug in divided doses
91Maximum safe doses of local anesthetics in adults
92Uses of Local Anesthetics
- Topical anesthesia
- - Anesthesia of mucous membranes (ears, nose,
mouth, genitourinary, bronchotrachial) - - Lidocaine, tetracaine, cocaine (ENT only)
- EMLA (eutectic mixture of local anesthetics)
- cream formed from lidocaine (2.5) prilocaine
(2.5) penetrates skin to 5mm within 1 hr,
permits superficial procedures, skin graft
harvesting - Infiltration Anesthesia
- - lidocaine, procaine, bupivacaine (with or w/o
epinephrine) - - block nerve at relatively small area
- - anesthesia without immobilization or
disruption of bodily functions - - use of epinephrine at end arteries (i.e.
fingers, toes) can cause severe vasoconstriction
leading to gangrene
93Uses of Local Anesthetics
- Nerve block anesthesia
- - Inject anesthetic around plexus (e.g.
brachial plexus for shoulder and upper arm) to
anesthetize a larger area - - Lidocaine, mepivacaine for blocks of 2 to 4
hrs, bupivacaine for longer - Bier Block (intravenous)
- - useful for arms, possible in legs
- - Lidocaine is drug of choice, prilocaine can
be used - - limb is exsanguinated with elastic bandage,
infiltrated with anesthetic - - tourniquet restricts circulation
- - done for less than 2 hrs due to ischemia,
pain from touniquet
94Uses of Local Anesthetics
- Spinal anesthesia
- - Inject anesthetic into lower CSF (below L2)
- - used mainly for lower abdomen, legs, saddle
block - - Lidocaine (short procedures), bupivacaine
(intermediate to long), tetracaine (long
procedures) - - Rostral spread causes sympathetic block,
desirable for bowel surgery - - risk of respiratory depression, postural
headache
95Uses of Local Anesthetics
- Epidural anesthesia
- - Inject anesthetic into epidural space
- - Bupivacaine, lidocaine, etidocaine,
chloroprocaine - - selective action of spinal nerve roots in
area of injection - - selectively anesthetize sacral, lumbar,
thoracic or cervical regions - - nerve affected can be determined by
concentration - - High conc sympathetic, somatic sensory,
somatic motor - - Intermediate somatic sensory, no motor block
- - low conc preganglionic sympathetic fibers
- - used mainly for lower abdomen, legs, saddle
block - - Lidocaine (short procedures), bupivacaine
(intermediate to long), tetracaine (long
procedures) - - Rostral spread causes sympathetic block,
desirable for bowel surgery - - risk of respiratory depression, postural
headache
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970
Neuromuscular Blocking Drugs
Michael H. Ossipov, Ph.D. Department of
Pharmacology
98Neuromuscular blocking drugs
0
- Extract of vines (Strychnos toxifera also
Chondrodendron species) - Used by indegenous peoples of Amazon basin in
poison arrows (not orally active, so food is safe
to eat) - Brought to Europe by Sir Walter Raleigh, others
- Curare-type drugs Tubocurare (bamboo tubes),
Gourd curare, Pot curare - Brody (1811) showed curare is not lethal is
animal is ventilated - Harley (1850) used curare for tetanus and
strychnine poisoning - Harold King (1935) isolates d-tubocurarine from a
museum sample determines structure.
99Neuromuscular blocking drugs
0
- Block synaptic transmission at the neuromuscular
junction - Affect synaptic transmission only at skeletal
muscle - Does not affect nerve transmission, action
potential generation - Act at nicotinic acetylcholine receptor NII
100Neuromuscular blocking drugs
0
(CH3)3N-(CH2)6-N(CH3)3 Hexamethonium (ganglionic
)
(CH3)3N-(CH2)10-N(CH3)3 Decamethonium (motor
endplate)
101Neuromuscular blocking drugs
0
- Acetylcholine is released from motor neurons in
discrete quanta - Causes all-or-none rapid opening of Na/K
channels (duration 1 msec) - Development of miniature end-plate potentials
(mEPP) - Summate to form EPP and muscle action potential
results in muscle contraction - ACh is rapidly hydrolyzed by acetylcholinesterase
no rebinding to receptor occurs unless AChE
inhibitor is present
102Non-depolarizing Neuromuscular blocking drugs
0
- Competetive antagonist of the nicotinic 2
receptor - Blocks ACh from acting at motor end-plate
- Reduction to 70 of initial EPP needed to prevent
muscle action potential - Muscle is insensitive to added Ach, but reactive
to K or electrical current - AChE inhibitors increase presence of ACh,
shifting equilibrium to favor displacing the
antagonist from motor end-plate
103Nondepolarizing drugs Metabolism
0
- Important in patients with impaired organ
clearance or plasmacholinesterase deficiency - Hepatic metabolism and renal excretion (most
common) - Atracurium, cis-atracurium nonenzymatic (Hoffman
elimination) - Mivacurium plasma cholinesterase
104Depolarizing Neuromuscular blocking drugs
0
- Succinylcholine, decamethonium
- Bind to motor end-plate and cause immediate and
persistent depolarization - Initial contraction, fasciculations
- Muscle is then in a depolarized, refractory state
- Desensitization of Ach receptors
- Insensitive to K, electrical stimulation
- Paralyzes skeletal more than respiratory muscles
105Succinlycholine Pharmacokinetics
0
- Fast onset (1 min)
- Short duration of action (2 to 3 min)
- Rapidly hydrolyzed by plasma cholinesterase
106Succinlycholine Clinical uses
0
- Tracheal intubation
- Indicated when rapid onset is desired (patient
with a full stomach) - Indicated when a short duration is desired
(potentially difficult airway)
107(No Transcript)
108Succinylcholine Side effects
0
- Prolonged neuromuscular blockade
- In patients lacking pseudocholinesterase
- Treat by maintaining ventilation until it wears
off hours later
109Succinylcholine Phase II block
0
- Prolonged exposure to succinlycholine
- Features of nondepolarizing blockade
- May take several hours to resolve
- May occur in patients unable to metabolize
succinylcholine (cholinesterase defects,
inhibitors) - Harmless if recognized
110Acetylcholinesterase inhibitors
0
- Acetylcholinesterase inhibitors have muscarinic
effects - Bronchospasm
- Urination
- Intestinal cramping
- Bradycardia
- Prevented by muscarinic blocking agent
111Selection of muscle relexant
0
- Onset and duration
- Route of metabolism and elimination
112Monitoring NM blockade
0
- Stimulate nerve
- Measure motor response (twitch)
- Depolarizing neuromuscular blocker
- Strength of twitch
- Nondepolarizing neuromuscular blocker
- Strength of twitch
- Decrease in strength of twitch with repeated
stimulation
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