Title: MS3 General Anesthesia Overview
1MS3 General Anesthesia Overview
2General 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
3Anesthesia 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
4Minimum 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)
5Minimum 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
6Dose 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
7Stages 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
8Stages 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
9Inhalational 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
10Modern Vaporizers allow Fine Control of
Inhalational Agent Delivery
11Big Picture
12Partial 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
13Inhalational 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
14Solubility
- 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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16Inspired 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
17Pulmonary 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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19Pulmonary 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
20Arteriovenous 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
21Gas Movement on Induction
22Elimination
- 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
23Gas flow Brain --gt Lung
24Cardiovascular 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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29Respiratory 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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33Malignant 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
34Halothane
- Halogenated hydrocarbon
- __________________
- 1 agent worldwide
- Venerable, breathable
- __________________
- Myocardial Depressant
- Myocardial Sensitization
- Metabolized 15-20
35Isoflurane (Forane)
- Halogenated Ether
- _______________
- 1 in USA
- Decreases SVR
- Little myocardial depression
- Minimal metabolism
36Nitrous Oxide
- Low molecular weight gas
- ______________________
- Low solubility (fast on/off)
- Good adjunct
- Minimal Myocardial effects
- _______________________
- Low Potency
37Intravenous Anesthetics
- Sedative-hypnotics
- Barbiturates
- Etomidate
- Propofol
- Benzodiazepines
- Opioids
- Dissociative anesthetics
- Ketamine
38Barbiturates
- 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
39Etomidate
- Carboxylated imidazole
- Minimal CV effects
- Potential adrenocortical suppression
- Myoclonic movements
40Propofol
- 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
41Benzodiazepines
- 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
42Opioids
- Main analgesic agents
- CV stability allows high dose techniques
- Dose dependent respiratory depression i.e.
decreased RR, decreased minute ventilation - Chest wall rigidity
43Opioids
- Prototype Agent Morphine
- Common synthetic agents Fentanyl, Sufentanil,
Alfentanil, Remifentanil - Specific Antagonist Naloxone
44Ketamine
- PCP cousin
- Dissociative action
- Sympathomimetic effects
- Analgesic
- Nightmares
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