Title: INHALED ANESTHETICS AND GASES
1INHALED ANESTHETICS AND GASES
- HARRY SINGH, MD
- DEPT. OF ANESTHESIOLOGY
- UTMB
2HISTORY
- Horace Wells administered N2O for dental
extraction in 1844 - William Green Morton demonstrated use of ether
for surgical anesthesia on October 16, 1846 at
MGH - Inventor and revealer of anesthetic inhalation
- Before whom in all time, surgery was agony.
- By whom pain in surgery was averted and annulled.
- Since whom science has control of pain
3KEY TOPICS
- Potency or MAC
- Factors affecting uptake and distribution
- Effects on various organ systems
- Metabolism and toxic effects
- N2O and Xenon
- Mechanisms of action
4STRUCTURE OF DIETHYL ETHER
5(No Transcript)
6ANESTHETIC POTENCY
- MAC
- MAC awake 0.3 MAC
- MAC BAR 1.5XMAC
- MAC intubation 2XMAC
- Alveolar concentration represents brain
concentration after a short period of
equilibration
7FACTORS AFFECTING MAC
- Temperature ? 2-5 for 1 0C ? temp.
- Age Maximum at 6 months?6/decade
- CNS catecholamine stimulation? MAC
- Benzodiazepine, opiates,alpha-2 agonists?MAC
- Inhaled anesthetics additive effect
- 1 N2O decreases MAC by 1
- Pregnancy ? MAC
- Ethanol acute ?MAC, chronic ? MAC
- Metabolic acidosis, hypoxia, hypotension? MAC
- Hypernatremia?MAC
- Hyponatremia, hypermagnesemia ?MAC
-
8MAC, BP, VAPOR PRESSURE
- MAC BP(0C) VP
(200C) - Halothane 0.77 50.2 241 mmHg
- Enflurane 1.7 56.2 175 mmHg
- Isoflurane 1.15 48.5 238 mmHg
- Sevoflurane 2.0 58.5 160 mmHg
- Desflurane 6.0 23 664 mmHg
- N2O 104
- Xenon 71
9UPTAKE AND DISTRIBUTION
- Goal To develop and maintain a satisfactory
partial pressure or tension of anesthetic at the
site of anesthetic action in brain - DeliveredgtInspiredgtAlveolargtArterialgtBrain
- Concentration Partial pressure/barometric
pressurex100 - Brain with its high perfusion per gram rapidly
equilibrates with anesthetic partial pressure in
blood
10Nitrous oxide
1.0
Desflurane
Sevoflurane
Isoflurane
FA/F1
Halothane
0.5
0
10
20
30
0
Anesthesia administration (min)
11Human Blood/Gas and Tissue/Blood Partition
Coefficients (MeanSD)1-4
12UPTAKE AND DISTRIBUTION
- Balance between the delivery of anesthetic and
its removal by uptake or metabolism determines
FA/FI ratio at any given time after
administration of inhaled anesthetic - The rate of rise of alveolar concentration (FA)
toward inspired concentration (FI) or FA/FI ratio
determines speed of induction of anesthesia - 1. Alveolar ventilation
- 2. The inspired concentration (concentration
effect) - 3. Second gas effect
13Ventilation lit/min
8
1.0
4
2
Nitrous oxide
8
Halothane
4
8
0.5
FA/F1
2
4
Diethyl ether
2
0
0
0
20
40
60
Anesthesia administration (min)
14UPTAKE AND DISTRIBUTION
- Concentration Effect The inspired anesthetic
concentration also determines the rate of rise of
alveolar concentration toward inspired
concentration (FA/FI) ratio. The greater the
inspired concentration, the more rapid is the
rate of rise in FA/FI ratio. It results from two
factors - 1. A concentrating of the residual gases
- 2. Increase in inspired ventilation
15UPTAKE AND DISTRIBUTION
- Second Gas Effect Factors governing
concentration effect also influence concentration
of any gas given concomitantly with N2O (Second
gas effect). It results from two factors - 1. The loss of volume associated with N2O uptake
concentrates the second gas - 2. Replacement of the gas taken up by an increase
in inspired ventilation augments the amount of
second gas in the lung.
16C 1 of second gas
B 1.7 of second gas
A 1 of second gas
19 O2
31.7 O2
19 O2
Absorbed gases replaced by added ventilation
Uptake of half of the N2O
40 N2O
66.7 N2O
80 N2O
7.6 O2
0.4 of second gas
32 N2O
17Anesthesia administration (min)
1.0
65 N2O
Desflurane in 65 N2O
0.9
5 N2O
FA/F1
0.8
Desflurane in
5 N2O
0
0
20
10
18UPTAKE AND DISTRIBUTION
- Anesthetic Uptake Factors Solubility x Cardiac
output x Alveolar to venous partial pressure
difference. - Solubility Primary factor that determines FA/FI
ratio - Blood/gas partition coefficient Relative
affinity or partitioning of an anesthetic between
two phases at equilibrium. - Larger blood/gas partition coefficient? more
solubility?greater uptake?? FA/FI ratio - Cardiac output ? Cardiac output? ?FA/FI ratio
19PARTITION COEFFICIENT OF NITROUS OXIDE
20UPTAKE AND DISTRIBUTION
- Alveolar to venous anesthetic gradient depends on
tissue uptake. - Tissue uptake
- 1. Tissue solubility (tissue/blood partition
coefficient) - 2. Tissue blood flow
- 3. Arterial to tissue anesthetic partial pressure
difference
21Tissue group characteristics
Tissue Group
Characteristic
Vessel-Rich
Muscle
Fat
Vessel-Poor
Percentage of body mass
10 50 20
20
Perfusion as percentage of cardiac output
75 19 6
0
22UPTAKE AND DISTRIBUTION
- Tissue Groups Three tissue groups form depots
for anesthetic within the body. - Vessel rich group (VRG) Brain, heart,
splanchnic bed, liver, kidney and endocrine - Equilibrates with blood in 4-8 minutes
- Muscle group (MG) Muscle and skin
- Equilibrates with blood in 2-4 hours
- Fat group (FG) Equilibration 70-80 min for N2O
- 30 hours for
sevoflurane - Vessel poor group (VPG)) Bone , cartilage,
ligaments, tendons-no uptake
23RECOVERY FROM ANESTHESIA
- Recovery correlates with fall in alveolar
concentration - Solubility Low solubility?Rapid recovery
- DesfluranegtSevofluranegtIsoflurane
- Duration of anesthesia
- MAC awake Varies with different anesthetics
- MAC awake of N2Ogt Inhlaled anesthetics
- Lower MAC awake More amnestic the agent
- Metabolism Alveolar washout of halothane more
rapid than enflurane - Residual gases in the anesthetic circuit.
24CARDIOVASCULAR EFFECTS
- Systolic and Diastolic Function
- Dose related negative inotropic effect
- HalothaneEnfluranegtIsofluraneDesfluraneSevoflur
ane - Dose related prolongation of isovolemic
relaxation, early LV filling and filling
associated with atrial systole
25CARDIOVASCULAR EFFECTS
- Systemic Hemodynamics
- Depress baroreceptors.
- No change in CI except halothane (?CI)
- Desflurane 1 MAC?1.5 - 2 MAC ? HR and BP
- Sevoflurane 1 MAC?1.5 - 2 MAC ? HR or no change
- Isoflurane Intermediate effect
- All cause concentration related decreases in BP
- Sevoflurane, desflurane, isoflurane?? SVR
- Halothane, enflurane? Myocardial depression
26CARDIOVASCULAR EFFECTS
- Epinephrine induced arrhythmias
- Halothane arrythmogenic
- Other agents safer
- Coronary Steal
- Coronary vasodilataion with isoflurane may cause
detrimental redistribution of coronary blood flow
away from ischemic myocardium with hypotension
leading to coronary steal - No coronary steal if hypotension avoided
27CARDIOVASCULAR EFFECTS
- Myocardial Protection
- Protect against reversible and irreversible
ischemia - Reduce the infarct size
- Decrease myocardial reperfusion injury and
improve functional recovery after global ischemia - Activation of intracellular transduction pathways
involving A1 receptors, PKC, G proteins and
mitochondrial or sarcolemmal KATP Channels
28PULMONARY EFFECTS
- Respiratory depression leading to ? MV and ?pCO2
DesfluranegtIsofluranegtSevoflurane - Depress ventilatory responses to hypercarbia and
hypoxia in a dose dependent manner - Respiratory Irritation
- 2 MAC Desflurane 75
- 2 MAC Isoflurane 50
- 2 MAC Sevoflurane 0
- 1 MAC No respiratory irritation
- Sevoflurane agent of choice for inhalation
induction
29PULMONARY EFFECTS
- Potent bronchodilators in animals and human
- Halothane probably the most potent bronchodilator
- Preferential dilatation of distal airways as
compared to proximal airways - Action mediated through several complex
mechanisms leading to ? intracellular Ca
30PULMONARY EFEFCTS
- Depress mucociliary clearance and function of
type II alveolar cells - Attenuate hypoxic pulmonary vasoconstriction
(HPV) in vitro - Modest inhibitory effects on HPV in vivo leading
to shunting and decreased oxygenation.
31CENTRAL NERVOUS SYSTEM
- ? EEG wave frequency and ? amplitude
- Higher conc. (2 MAC) Isoelectric EEG and burst
suppression - Protect against ischemia by ? CMRO2
- Cerebral vasodilation leading to ? ICP
- Enflurane and sevoflurane to a lesser extent can
cause convulsions - Dose related ? amplitude and ? latency of evoked
potentials
32UTERINE AND FETAL EFFECTS
- Dose dependent relaxation of uterus
- Increased blood loss during CD
- Lower concentrations (0.5MAC safer)
- Inhaled anesthetics cross placenta
- Higher concentration Fetal cardiovascular
depression - Reduction of CBF and O2 delivery to brain
33NEUROMUSCULAR SYSTEM
- Dose dependent muscle relaxation
- Can cause sufficient relaxation to permit
endotracheal intubation and facilitate intra
abdominal procedures - Potentiate the action of muscle relaxants
- Non depolarizers gt Depolarizers
- All trigger MH Halothane worse
34NITROUS OXIDE
- Clear, colorless and odorless gas
- Supplied in pressurized cylinders
- Elimination through exhalation
- No biotransformation
- Uptake and elimination rapid due to low blood/gas
partition coefficient (0.47)
35NITROUS OXIDE
- Analgesia in a dose dependent manner
- gt60 produce amnesia
- Cant be used as sole anesthetic (MAC 104)
- Direct negative inotropic effect
- Mild sympathetic nervous system agonist
- Modest increases in PAP and PVR
- Mild respiratory depression
- Cerebral vasodilation leading to ? ICP
- ? CMRO2
36NITROUS OXIDE
- Expansion of closed gas spaces
- N2O 31 times more soluble than nitrogen (nitrogen
blood gas partition coefficient0.015) - Moves faster into spaces than nitrogen can move
out - Contraindicated in pneumothorax, air embolism,
posterior fossa surgery, laparoscopy and
tympanoplasty - Diffusion hypoxia or Fink effect
- Significant for 5-10 min after discontinuation of
anesthesia during recovery - 1. Large amounts of released N2O displace O2
- 2. Reduced alveolar ventilation due to fall in
CO2 -
37METABOLISM
- Halothane 20
- Enflurane 2.5
- Isoflurane 0.2
- Desflurane 0.01-0.02
- Sevoflurane5
38HEPATOTOXICITY
- Correlates with extent of oxidative metabolism
- HalothanegtEnfluranegtIsofluranegtDesflurane
- 50 case reports with enflurane
- Fewer case reports with isoflurane
- One case report with desflurane
39HALOTHANE HEPATITIS
- Trifluoroacetic acid, chlorine and bromine
- Major metabolite Trifluoracetic acid
- Intermediate reactive metabolite TFA-Cl
- Trifluoracetylated proteins?formation of
anti-trifluoracetylated protein antibodies - Subsequent exposures lead to massive hepatic
necrosis - Sevoflurane metabolism different from other
inhaled anesthetics - Sevoflurane Inorganic fluoride and
hexafluoroisopropanol
40CLINICAL FEATURES
- MILD FORM
- Incidence 15
- Repeat exposure not necessary
- Mild elevation of ALT, AST
- Focal necrosis
- Self limited
41CLINICAL FEATURES
- FULMINANT FORM
- Incidence 110,000
- Multiple exposures
- Marked elevation of ALT, AST, bilirubin and
alkaline phosphatase - Massive hepatic necrosis
- Mortality 50
- Antibodies to halothane altered protein antigen
42NEPHROTOXICITY
- Methoxyflurane Vasopressin resistant high output
renal failure - Related to inorganic fluoride
- Subclinical nephrotoxicity 50-80 uM/lit
- Overt nephrotoxicity 80-175 uM/lit
- 2-4 MAC-hr enflurane 20-30 uM/lit
- 2-4 MAC-hr isoflurane 3-8 uM/lit
- Desflurane Unchanged
43NEPHROTOXICITY
- 1-2 MAC-hr sevoflurane 10-20 uM/lit
- 2-7 MAC-hr sevoflurane 20-40 uM/lit
- 15 sevoflurane anesthetics?gt50 uM/lit
- Absence of sevoflurane nephrotoxicity contradicts
classical fluoride hypothesis of 50 uM toxic
threshold
44COMPOUND A
- Sevoflurane decomposes to compound A in presence
of CO2 absorbents (alkali) - Higher compound A formation
- Low FGF
- Higher absorbent temperature
- ? CO2 production
- Greater sevoflurane concentrations
- Baralyme gt soda lime
- Compound A renal injury
- Dose and time dependent, transient, 150 ppm-hr
45CO2 Flow vs COMPOUND A and Temperature
46FGF vs COMPOUND A
47COMPOUND A
- Toxic threshold reached after prolonged
sevoflurane anesthesia - Compound A nephrotoxicity more of theoretical
concern - Patients with preexisting renal disease should
not be exposed to sevoflurane - Sevoflurane should not be used with FGF lt 1
lit/min - For exposure greater than 2 MAC hr, FGF should be
increased to 2 lit/min or above
48CARBON MONOXIDE
- CO formation occurs in presence of desiccated CO2
absorbents - DesfluranegtIsofluranegtEnflurane
- Common scenario-First case Monday morning
- Intraoperative detection difficult
- Pulse oxymeters cant distinguish between
carboxyhemoglobin and oxyhemoglobin
49CARBON MONOXIDE
- Factors influencing CO production
- Choice of anesthetic agent
- Inspired anesthetic concentration
- Temperature and degree of dryness of CO2
absorbent - Type of absorbent Baralyme gt Soda lime
- Precautions Use of fresh absorbent, use of soda
lime instead of baralyme and avoiding techniques
drying CO2 absorber - CO toxicity Undetected in great proportion of
cases
50HEMATOPOIETIC AND NEUROLOGIC EFFECTS OF N2O
- N2O by oxidation of vit B12 inhibits methionine
synthetase preventing conversion of
methyltetrahydrofolate to tetrahydrofolate - Reduced synthesis of thymidine
- 50 N2O for 12 hrs-mild megaloblastic changes
- Marked changes after exposure for 24 hrs
- Complete bone marrow failure after exposure for
several days - Subacute combined degeneration of spinal cord
after exposure for several months - Should not be used in vit B12 deficient patients
51XENON
- Not approved for clinical use in humans yet
- Inert gas with anesthetic properties
- Obtained by fractional distillation of air
- Expensive to manufacture
- Minimal hemodynamic side effects
- ? Pulmonary airway resistance (high density)
- Not metabolized
- Doesnt trigger MH in animals
- Positive environmental effects
52MECHANISMS OF ACTION
- KEY POINTS
- The structural diversity of inhaled anesthetics
suggests that they all do not interact with
single receptor site (multisite theory). - Physical or biochemical changes important to
mechanism occur within seconds and are rapidly
reversible - Inhaled anesthetics have inhibitory synaptic
gtaxonal effects in the brain and spinal cord. - Immobility occurs by action on the spinal cord
- Amnesia is achieved by action on the brain.
53MECHANISMS OF ACTION
- Many excitatory (e.g. glutamate) and inhibitory
(GABA, glycine) neurotransmitters alter the
anesthetic requirement. - Gaseous agents ( N2O and xenon) exert their
effect by inhibition of excitatory glutamate
(NMDA) receptors - Volatile agents exert their greater effect by
enhancing inhibitory GABA or glycine transmission
54MECHANISMS OF ACTION
- Meyer Overton Hypothesis describes the
correlation between lipid solubility and
anesthetic potency (unitary theory of narcosis) - MAC X Oil/gas partition coefficient1.84 atm for
conventional anesthetics - Additive effect of inhaled anesthetics
- However some volatile halogenated compounds like
non-immobilizers, transitional compounds and
alcohols dont obey Meyer Overton hypothesis
55Neurotransmitter release
(GABA, glycine)
Postsynaptic membrane
Ca2 entry
Action potential
Inhibitory postsynaptic potential
CI-
Voltage
CI-
Anesthetic
CI-
Time
B
A
Extracellular
a
B
a
B
B
Critical amino acids
4
2
3
1
Intracellular
Channel pore
Putative anesthetic site
D
C
56SUGGESTED READINGS
- Inhaled Anesthetics in Millers Anesthesia (Vol
1), Editor Ronald D Miller, Churchill
Livingstone. - The Pharmacology of Inhaled Anesthetics by Edmond
I Eger II, James B Eisenkraft, Richard B
Weiskopf. - Basic Physics and Measurement in Anaesthesia,
Editor Paul D Davis and Gavin NC Kenny.
57Vernal and Nevada Falls, Yosemite