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MS3 General Anesthesia Overview

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... exposed to a noxious stimulus (e.g., surgical incision) ... 1.0X MAC MAC 50% of patients will not move at surgical incision ... Stage of Surgical Anesthesia ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: MS3 General Anesthesia Overview


1
MS3 General Anesthesia Overview
2
General Anesthesia
  • A controlled reversible state of
  • Amnesia (with loss of consciousness)
  • Analgesia
  • Akinesia (skeletal muscle relaxation)
  • Autonomic and sensory reflex blockade
  • Called the 4 As of General Anesthesia

3
Anesthesia Terms
Balanced Anesthesia- GA with several
Agents Regional Anesthesia- using LAs to
anesthetize a body region Combined Technique-
regional plus light GA Conscious Sedation- IV
agents for analgesia/ anxiolysis
maintaining consciousness
4
Minimum Alveolar Concentration (MAC)
  • The steady state minimum alveolar concentration
    (percent) of an inhalational agent that is
    required for immobility of 50 of the subjects
    exposed to a noxious stimulus (e.g., surgical
    incision)

5
Minimum Alveolar Concentration (MAC)
  • Provides a means to compare the potency of the
    various inhalational agents
  • Serves as a guide to determining dose
  • Similar to an ED50 value for an intravenous agent
  • MAC values are additive

6
Dose Response(Multiples of MAC)
  • DOSE RESPONSE ALVEOLAR CONCENTRATION at
    which
  • .5 X MAC MAC Awake 50 of patients can be
    awakened
  • 1.0X MAC MAC 50 of patients will not move
    at surgical incision
  • 1.3X MAC ED 95 95 of patients will not
    move at surgical incision
  • 1.5-2.0X MAC-BAR 50 of patients have
    blocked autonomic response

7
Stages of AnesthesiaGuedel 1930s
  • Stage of Analgesia
  • Analgesia without amnesia, impaired judgement,
    vertigo/ataxia, increased respiration, blood
    pressure, heart rate
  • Stage of Excitement
  • Delirious, excited, amnestic. Irregular
    respirations, struggling, retching and vomiting

8
Stages of Anesthesia- cont.
  • Stage of Surgical Anesthesia
  • Recurrence of regular respiration --gt cessation,
    Loss of corneal, swallowing, eyelid reflexes
    Skeletal muscle relaxation Decreased blood
    pressure
  • Stage of Medullary Depression
  • Begins at cessation of spontaneous respiration
    --gt severe depression of vasomotor and
    respiratory centers--gtwithout support Death

9
Inhalational Anesthetics
  • Drugs administered as gases
  • Via facemask or endotracheal tube
  • Volatile liquids vaporized in a carrier gas
  • Potent Agents widely used in USA halothane,
    isoflurane, desflurane and sevoflurane
  • Nitrous Oxide (N2O), a gas at ambient
    temp/pressure, is a low potency adjunct

10
Modern Vaporizers allow Fine Control of
Inhalational Agent Delivery
11
Big Picture
12
Partial Pressure
  • The concentration of a gas in a mixture is
    proportional to its Partial Pressure. The terms
    partial pressure (torr) and concentration (vol
    per cent) are used interchangeably to describe
    the dosage of inhaled anesthetics PPA
    x 100 concentration (vol ) Total P

13
Inhalational AnestheticsPharmacokinetics
  • Agents achieve increased effect as the steady
    state concentration (partial pressure) increases
    in the brain
  • Rate of partial pressure increase in the brain
    depends on multiple factors Solubility,
    Inspired anesthetic concentration Pulmonary
    ventilation Arteriovenous concentration
    gradients Pulmonary and cerebral blood flow

14
Solubility
  • Defined in terms of a partition coefficient
  • BloodGas partition coefficient describes an
    anesthetics relative affinity for the blood
    compared to air
  • molecules in blood/ molecules in gas at SS
  • Agents with low solubility require relatively few
    molecules to dissolve into the blood to raise
    partial pressure to equilibrium (opposite for
    highly soluble agents)

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Inspired Anesthetic Concentration
  • The rate of induction of anesthesia by an
    inhalational agent can be increased by increasing
    the inspired concentration of the agent
  • Several multiples of the MAC value for an agent
    are often used initially to try to rapidly
    achieve an adequate brain level of an agent

17
Pulmonary Ventilation
  • The rate of rise of anesthetic in the blood is
    also determined by the minute ventilation of the
    patient
  • Increasing ventilation generally increases the
    speed of induction, i.e. carrying agent into the
    alveoli faster means gas taken up is replenished
    more quickly and a higher concentration is
    maintained in alveoli

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Pulmonary Blood Flow
  • Increased pulmonary blood flow (increased cardiac
    output) decreases the rate of rise of the
    arterial anesthetic gas tension
  • Agent has a greater volume of blood to saturate
    and the partial pressure will increase more
    slowly
  • Patients with low cardiac output would therefore
    have a relatively quick induction

20
Arteriovenous Concentration Gradient
  • Dependent on the uptake of the anesthetic by the
    tissues
  • TissueBlood partition coefficients
  • Rates of blood flow to the tissues
  • Concentration gradients
  • The larger the partial pressure gradient between
    arterial and venous blood, the more time it takes
    to achieve equilibrium

21
Gas Movement on Induction
22
Elimination
  • Recovery processes are similar (reversed) to
    those of induction
  • Major route of elimination is via the lungs and
    the agents follow a gradient back to the alveoli
  • Agents with low solubility are eliminated quickly
  • Minimal metabolism, primarily in the liver

23
Gas flow Brain --gt Lung
24
Cardiovascular Effectsof Inhalational Agents
  • Dose-dependent decrease in MAP
    (N2O sympathomimetic effects may obscure effect
    when used with potent agents)
  • Newer agents predominately decrease SVR,
    Halothane depresses the myocardium
  • Potent agents reduce myocardial O2 consumption
  • Halothane sensitizes myocardium to
    catechol-amines, predisposing to ventricular
    arrhythmias

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Respiratory Effectsof Inhalational Agents
  • Decreased tidal volume with an increased
    respiratory rate --gt overall decrease in minute
    ventilation (except N2O)
  • All inhalational agents decrease the ventilatory
    response to increases in PaCO2
  • Decreased ventilatory response to hypoxia

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Malignant Hyperthermia
  • Rare, inherited, potentially lethal syndrome
  • Characterized by hypermetabolic activity, marked
    CO2 production, altered skeletal muscle tone and
    metabolic acidosis
  • Triggers potent inhaled agents and SUX
  • Probably altered Calcium metabolism
  • Treatment Dantrolene (CA blocker)
  • DX requires muscle biopsy/ in vitro testing

34
Halothane
  • Halogenated hydrocarbon
  • __________________
  • 1 agent worldwide
  • Venerable, breathable
  • __________________
  • Myocardial Depressant
  • Myocardial Sensitization
  • Metabolized 15-20

35
Isoflurane (Forane)
  • Halogenated Ether
  • _______________
  • 1 in USA
  • Decreases SVR
  • Little myocardial depression
  • Minimal metabolism

36
Nitrous Oxide
  • Low molecular weight gas
  • ______________________
  • Low solubility (fast on/off)
  • Good adjunct
  • Minimal Myocardial effects
  • _______________________
  • Low Potency

37
Intravenous Anesthetics
  • Sedative-hypnotics
  • Barbiturates
  • Etomidate
  • Propofol
  • Benzodiazepines
  • Opioids
  • Dissociative anesthetics
  • Ketamine

38
Barbiturates
  • Thiopental ultra short acting
  • Crosses BBB rapidly
  • Short effect due to redistribution (t1/2ª)
  • Dose dependent decreases in SV,
    MAP, CO
  • Potent respiratory depressant i.e.-gtApnea
  • Reduces CMRO2 and CBF

39
Etomidate
  • Carboxylated imidazole
  • Minimal CV effects
  • Potential adrenocortical suppression
  • Myoclonic movements

40
Propofol
  • Phenol derivative
  • Effects similar to barbiturates
  • Amnestic and anti-emetic effects
  • Useful as sedation agent
  • Most popular ambulatory surgery induction agent
    --gt least residual sedation

41
Benzodiazepines
  • Primarily for anxiolytic/amnestic effects
  • Preop/intraop sedation
  • Uncommonly used as induction agents
  • Midazolam most popular (short T1/2 and water
    soluble)
  • Specific antagonist Flumazenil

42
Opioids
  • Main analgesic agents
  • CV stability allows high dose techniques
  • Dose dependent respiratory depression i.e.
    decreased RR, decreased minute ventilation
  • Chest wall rigidity

43
Opioids
  • Prototype Agent Morphine
  • Common synthetic agents Fentanyl, Sufentanil,
    Alfentanil, Remifentanil
  • Specific Antagonist Naloxone

44
Ketamine
  • PCP cousin
  • Dissociative action
  • Sympathomimetic effects
  • Analgesic
  • Nightmares

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