Title: Neuromuscular disorders and the Acetylcholine receptor
1Neuro-muscular disorders and the Acetylcholine
receptor
- Joseph M. Caiati, MD
- Department of Anesthesiology
2Overview
- The Neuromuscular Junction
- Diseases that Increase AChRs in Skeletal Muscle
- Disease that decreases AChRs in Skeletal Muscle
- Succinylcholine and other NDMRs
- Sugammadex
3The Neuromuscular JunctionNormal
- AChRs at NMJ are nicotinic
- AChRs only in Neuromuscular Junction
- 75 blockedweakness 95paralysis
- Depolarization with SCh leads to increase in
serum K of 0.5-1.0meq/L - ACh and SCh act briefly at NMJ due to rapid
metabolism by ACh esterase
4Normal
5Classic receptor theory
- Lack of receptor stimulation causes receptor
proliferation - Heavy receptor stimulation causes receptor number
to decrease - If there is a proliferation of AChRs
- There will be increased sensitivity to agonists
(SCh) - There will be decreased sensitivity to
competitive antagonists (NDMR)
6The Neuro-Muscular Junction up-regulated
- AChRs spread throughout the muscle membrane - up
to 100X more receptors - Additional Isoforms of AChRs expressed when lack
of NM transmission - Metabolites of ACh and SCh (choline) will also
strongly and persistently open (2-10X) the AChRs
exaggerating the K flow
7The Neuro-Muscular Junction up-regulated
- ACh from nerve terminal in upregulated state does
not cause hyperkalemia- ACh esterase prevents
spread beyond NMJ - Systemic SCh reaches all AChRs and depolarizes
all virtually simultaneously many far from ACh
esterase of nerve terminal- metabolites as well
continue to open channels causing hyperkalemia
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9Pharmacologic Basis for Agonist (SCh) Sensitivity
- Upregulated AChRs stay open longer in response to
agonist - Metabolites of both ACh and SCh (choline) also
can open the upregulated (immature) AChRs
10Pharmacologic Basis for Resistance to NDMRs
- More AChRs- upregulation
- Same amount of NDMR
- ACh can still find many available AChRs to cause
depolarization and muscle twitch
11Diseases that Increase AChRs in Skeletal
Musclea.k.a up-regulation
- Motor Neuron Disorders
- Upper, lower or both
- Disorders of the Neuro-Muscular Junction
- Muscle Disorders
- Other disorders
12Upper Motor Neuron DisordersStroke/ Traumatic
spinal cord injury
- After stroke, weak/paretic side resistant to
NDMRs (monitor twitches elsewhere) - After cord injury, diffuse AChR proliferation
within 3-5 days (fastest) - SCh safe for first 24 hours after event
13Motor Neuron DisordersAmyotrophic Lateral
Sclerosis Lou Gerhigs disease
- Typically affects men 40-60 years old
- Progressive weakness leading to respiratory
failure and death after mean 3-5 years - Upper and lower motor neurons spontaneously
degenerate - Only FDA approved Rx may prolong life by 3-6
months - SCh may produce hyperkalemia
- Usually NMB resistant
- High risk for resp failure and aspiration periop
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15Multiple Sclerosis (MS)
- Women Men 21
- Autoimmune demyelinating disease of CNS
- Motor and sensory paths involved
- Spares peripheral nerves
- Vision problems, limb paresthesias, incontinence
- Characterized by relapses/flairs and remissions
- Rx Corticosteroids/ immunosuppressants
- Global resistance to NDMRs
- Hyperkalemia has been reported
- Avoid regional- demyelinated nerves more
vulnerable to neurotoxic effects of local anes.
16CNS/ upper motor neuron disorders that do NOT
cause upregulation of AChRs
- Cerebral Palsey
- Spina Bifida/Meningomyelocele
- Both are congenital
- Succinylcholine not contraindicated
17Lower Motor Neuron DisordersGuillain-Barre
- Autoimmune-mediated LMN polyneuropathy
- Often preceded by viral or bacterial infection
- Rapidly progressive
- Variable severity
- May lead to respiratory failure or paralysis
- Autonomic nerves affected- labile BP
- Often recovery after supportive care
- SCh hyperkalemia- NMB sensitivity
- Autonomic involvement-HD monitoring
- High risk for resp failure and aspiration
18Hyperkalemia in ICU patients after SCh
- Multifactorial sensory and motor neuropathy of
critically ill patients - Steroid neuropathy
- Nutritional neuropathy
- Neuro-trauma
- Chronic neuro-muscular blockers
- chemical denervation
- Disuse atrophy/immobilization
19Traumatic peripheral nerve injury
- AChR upregulation in muscles begins in 3-4 days
- Resistance to NDMRs
- Depending on extent of denervation, SCh induced
hyperkalemia possible within 5-7 days - Do not monitor twitches on affected limb
- Immobilization of a limb and PVD with atrophy-
slower upregulation than after nerve injury but
still a risk
20Muscle Disorders-upregulation and
rhabdomyolysisDuchennes Muscular Dystrophy
- Inherited sex linked recessive (X chrom.)
- 1/3500 male births
- Dystrophin- important in myocyte structure
- Poorly anchored muscle cells degenerate and are
replaced by fat cells - Smooth, cardiac and skeletal muscle cells all
affected - Appears age 2-6 card/ resp failure by 20
- Corticosteroids slow process a bit
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22Muscle DisordersDuchennes Muscular Dystrophy
- Aspiration, respiratory failure and dilated
cardiomyopathy are periop concerns - Hyperkalemia and rhabdomyolysis in response to
SCh- avoid esp in young boys - Volatile agents may cause rhabdomyolysis
- Very sensitive to NDMRs- monitor
- Association with MH? clean technique suggested
23Muscle DisordersMuscle Trauma/ Burns/
immobilization
- Burns
- and degree not always proportional to
susceptibility to hyperkalemia - Hyperkalemic arrest reported in 8 BSA burn
- no reports of hyperkalemia lt 24hrs
- NDMR resistant proportional to BSA burned
- Immobilization
- Upregulation within 6-12 hours
- Clinically relevant within 24-72 hours
24Diagnosis and treatment of hyperkalemia from SCh
- Hyperkalemia is dose dependent
- Treatment is initiated based on history
- SCh administration and susceptible pathologic
state - Treatment based on EKG due to acuity- dont wait
for K levels - If there are EKG changes- TREAT
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26Diagnosis and treatment of hyperkalemia from SCh
- CPR
- Antagonize effect of hyperkalemia
- Calcium Chloride (1-2gm over 2-3min.)
- Move potassium out of plasma
- Into cells
- D50 regular insulin
- Epinephrine
- Out of body
- GI resins not helpful in acute setting
27Recommendations
- Avoid SCh after 48-72 hours of denervation/immobil
ization or any pathologic state where AChRs are
known to upregulate - Pre-curarization does not affect susceptibility
- Upregulation lasts far beyond recovery
(hyperkalemic arrest 8 weeks after full recovery
from stroke, years after long ICU stay or major
burns) - Multiple risk factors dramatically increase risk
of hyperkalemic response - Congenital conditions do not seem to be a risk
for hyperkalemia (CP/ syringomyelia)
28Diseases that Decrease AChRs in Skeletal
Musclea.k.a. down-regulation
- Myasthenia Gravis
- Chronic Anti-cholinesterase use
- Heavy chronic conditioning exercise?
29Diseases of the Neuromuscular JunctionMyasthenia
Gravis
- Autoimmune disease
- Antibodies against AChR
- Characterized by fatigable weakness
- Improved by rest or ACh esterase drugs
- Ocular or generalized (resp/crisis)
- Rx cholinesterase inhibitors, immunosuppressants,
thymectomy (96) - Physiologic stressgt exacerbation
- Resistant to SCh,Sensitive to NDMRs (avoid?)
30Sugammadex-the holy grail?Reverses NM blockade
by ENCAPSULATION
Sparr et al. Anesthesiology 2007 106(5)935-943
- 98 healthy male volunteers
- 0.6mg/kg rocuroniumTIVA
- Time to TOF 0.9 after 8mg/kg Sugamm.
31Sugammadex-the holy grail?Reverses NM blockade
by ENCAPSULATION
De Boer et al. Anesthesiology 2007 107(2)239-244
- 45 patients TIVA
- 1.2mg/kg rocuronium
- 5 min. after roc. 12 mg/kg Sugam. Given
- TOF gt0.9 mean 1.4min (1.0-1.9)
- NO EVIDENCE OF BLOCK RECURRENCE/ SIDE EFFECTS
32Sugammadex neutralizing Rocuronium molecule
33Bibliography
- Stevens RD. Neuromuscular Disorders and
Anesthesia. Current Opinions in Anesthesiolgy
2001 14 693-698 - Martyn JA et al. Succinylcholine-induced
Hyperkalemia in Acquired Pathologic States.
Anesthesiology 2006 104(1) 158-169 - Martyn JA et al. Up-and-down regulation of
skeletal muscle acetylcholine receptors.
Anesthesiology 1992 76 822-843.