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1.
Background: Clonidine, which is known to have analgesic and sedative properties, has recently been shown to be an effective preanesthetic medication in children. The drug may cause side effects, including bradycardia and hypotension. This study was conducted to evaluate the ability of intravenous atropine to increase the heart rate (HR) in awake children receiving clonidine preanesthetic medication.

Methods: We studied 96 otherwise healthy children, 8-13 yr old, undergoing minor surgery. They received, at random, oral clonidine 2 or 4 micro gram *symbol* kg sup -1 or placebo 105 min before scheduled induction of anesthesia. Part I (n = 48, 16 per group): When hemodynamic parameters after insertion of a venous catheter had been confirmed to be stable, atropine was administered in incremental doses of 2.5, 2.5, and 5 micro gram *symbol* kg sup -1 every 2 min. The HR and blond pressure were recorded at 1-min intervals. Part II (n = 48, 16 per group): After the recording of baseline hemodynamic values, successive doses of atropine (5 micro gram *symbol* kg sup -1 every 2 min, to 40 micro gram *symbol* kg sup -1), were administered until HR increased by 20 beats *symbol* min sup -1. The HR and blood pressure were recorded at 1-min intervals.

Results: Part I: The increases in HR in response to a cumulative dose of atropine 10 micro gram *symbol* kg sup -1 were 33 plus/minus 3%, 16 plus/minus 3%, and 8 plus/minus 2% (mean plus/minus SEM) in children receiving placebo, clonidine 2 micro gram *symbol* kg sup -1, and clonidine 4 micro gram *symbol* kg sup -1, respectively (P < 0.05). Part II: The HR in the control group increased by more than 20 beats *symbol* min sup -1 in response to atropine 20 micro gram *symbol* kg sup -1 or less. In two patients in the clonidine 4 micro gram *symbol* kg sup -1 group, HR did not increase by 20 beats *symbol* min sup -1 even after 40 micro gram *symbol* kg sup -1 of atropine.  相似文献   


2.
Background: Greater cerebral metabolic suppression may increase the brain's tolerance to ischemia. Previous studies examining the magnitude of metabolic suppression afforded by profound hypothermia suggest that the greater arterial carbon dioxide tension of pH-stat management may increase metabolic suppression when compared with alpha-stat management.

Methods: New Zealand White rabbits, anesthetized with fentanyl and diazepam, were maintained during cardiopulmonary bypass (CPB) at a brain temperature of 17 degrees Celsius with alpha-stat (group A, n = 9) or pH-stat (group B, n = 9) management. Measurements of brain temperature, systemic hemodynamics, arterial and cerebral venous blood gases and oxygen content, cerebral blood flow (CBF) (radiolabeled microspheres), and cerebral metabolic rate for oxygen (CMRO2) (Fick) were made in each animal at 65 and 95 min of CPB. To control for arterial pressure and CBF differences between techniques, additional rabbits underwent CPB at 17 degrees Celsius. In group C (alpha-stat, n = 8), arterial pressure was decreased with nitroglycerin to values observed with pH-stat management. In group D (pH-stat, n = 8), arterial pressure was increased with angiotensin II to values observed with alpha-stat management. In groups C and D, CBF and CMRO2 were determined before (65 min of CPB) and after (95 min of CPB) arterial pressure manipulation.

Results: In groups A (alpha-stat) and B (pH-stat), arterial pressure; hemispheric CBF (44 plus/minus 17 vs. 21 plus/minus 4 ml *symbol* 100 g sup -1 *symbol* min sup -1 [median plus/minus quartile deviation]; P = 0.017); and CMRO2 (0.54 plus/minus 0.13 vs. 0.32 plus/minus 0.10 ml Oxygen2 *symbol* 100 g sup -1 *symbol* min sup -1; P = 0.0015) were greater in alpha-stat than in pH-stat animals, respectively. As a result of arterial pressure manipulation, in groups C (alpha-stat) and D (pH-stat) neither arterial pressure (75 plus/minus 2 vs. 78 plus/minus 2 mm Hg) nor hemispheric CBF (40 plus/minus 10 vs. 48 plus/minus 6 ml *symbol* 100 g sup -1 *symbol* min sup -1; P = 0.21) differed between alpha-stat and pH-stat management, respectively. Nevertheless, CMRO2 was greater in alpha-stat than in pH-stat animals (0.71 plus/minus 0.10 vs. 0.45 plus/minus 0.10 ml Oxygen2 *symbol* 100 g sup -1 *symbol* min sup -1, respectively; P = 0.002).  相似文献   


3.
Background: Although pulsatile and nonpulsatile cardiopulmonary bypass (CPB) do not differentially affect cerebral blood flow (CBF) or metabolism during hypothermia, studies suggest pulsatile CPB may result in greater CBF than nonpulsatile CPB under normothermic conditions. Consequently, nonpulsatile flow may contribute to poorer neurologic outcome observed in some studies of normothermic CPB. This study compared CBF and cerebral metabolic rate for oxygen (CMRO2) between pulsatile and nonpulsatile CPB at 37 degrees Celsius.

Methods: In experiment A, 16 anesthetized New Zealand white rabbits were randomized to one of two pulsatile CPB groups based on pump systolic ejection period (100 and 140 ms, respectively). Each animal was perfused at 37 degrees Celsius for 30 min at each of two pulse rates (150 and 250 pulse/min, respectively). This scheme created four different arterial pressure waveforms. At the end of each perfusion period, arterial pressure waveform, arterial and cerebral venous oxygen content, CBF (microspheres), and CMRO2 (Fick) were measured. In experiment B, 22 rabbits were randomized to pulsatile (100-ms ejection period, 250 pulse/min) or nonpulsatile CPB at 37 degrees Celsius. At 30 and 60 min of CPB, physiologic measurements were made as before.

Results: In experiment A, CBF and CMRO2 were independent of ejection period and pulse rate. Thus, all four waveforms were physiologically equivalent. In experiment B, CBF did not differ between pulsatile and nonpulsatile CPB (72 plus/minus 6 vs. 77 plus/minus 9 ml *symbol* 100 g sup -1 *symbol* min1, respectively (median plus/minus quartile deviation)). CMRO2 did not differ between pulsatile and nonpulsatile CPB (4.7 plus/minus 0.5 vs. 4.1 plus/minus 0.6 ml Oxygen2 *symbol* 100 g sup -1 *symbol* min1, respectively) and decreased slightly (0.4 plus/minus 0.4 ml Oxygen2 *symbol* 100 g sup -1 *symbol* min1) between measurements.  相似文献   


4.
Background: Changes in the distribution of respiratory drive to different respiratory muscles may contribute to respiratory depression produced by halothane. The aim of this study was to examine factors that are responsible for halothane-induced depression of the ventilatory response to carbon dioxide rebreathing.

Methods: In six human subjects, respiratory muscle activity in the parasternal intercostal, abdominal, and diaphragm muscles was measured using fine-wire electromyography electrodes. Chest wall motion was determined by respiratory impedance plethysmography. Electromyography activities and chest wall motion were measured during hyperpnea produced by carbon dioxide rebreathing while the subjects were awake and during 1 MAC halothane anesthesia.

Results: Halothane anesthesia significantly reduced the slope of the response of expiratory minute ventilation to carbon dioxide (from 2.88 plus/minus 0.73 (mean plus/minus SE) to 2.01 plus/minus 0.45 l *symbol* min sup -1 *symbol* mmHg sup -1). During the rebreathing period, breathing frequency significantly increased while awake (from 10.3 plus/minus 1.4 to 19.7 plus/minus 2.6 min sup -1, P < 0.05) and significantly decreased while anesthetized (from 28.8 plus/minus 3.9 to 21.7 plus/minus 1.9 min sup -1, P < 0.05). Increases in respiratory drive to the phrenic motoneurons produced by rebreathing, as estimated by the diaphragm electromyogram, were enhanced by anesthesia. Anesthesia attenuated the response of parasternal electromyography and accentuated the response of the transversus abdominis electromyography to rebreathing. The compartmental response of the ribcage to rebreathing was significantly decreased by anesthesia (from 1.83 plus/minus 0.58 to 0.48 plus/minus 0.13 l *symbol* min sup -1 *symbol* mmHg sup -1), and marked phase shifts between ribcage and abdominal motion developed in some subjects. However, at comparable tidal volumes, the ribcage contribution to ventilation was similar while awake and anesthetized in four of the six subjects.  相似文献   


5.
Background: A rapid increase in desflurane concentration to greater than 1 MAC transiently increases heart rate, arterial blood pressure, and circulating catecholamine concentration. Because propofol decreases sympathetic outflow, it was hypothesized that propofol would blunt these responses.

Methods: To test this hypothesis, five healthy male volunteers were studied three times. After induction of anesthesia with 2 mg *symbol* kg sup -1 propofol, anesthesia was maintained with 4% end-tidal desflurane in oxygen (0.55 MAC) via an endotracheal tube for 32 min. On separate occasions, in random order, either no propofol or 2 mg *symbol* kg sup -1 propofol was administered either 2 or 5 min before increasing end-tidal desflurane concentration from 4% to 8%.

Results: Without propofol pretreatment, the increase to 8% desflurane transiently increased heart rate (from 63+/-3 beats/min to 108 +/-5 beats/min, mean+/-SEM; P < 0.01), mean arterial pressure (from 73+/-1 mmHg to 118+/-6 mmHg; P < 0.01), and epinephrine concentration (from 14+/-1 pg *symbol* ml sup -1 to 279+/-51 pg *symbol* ml sup -1; P < 0.05). There was no significant change in norepinephrine concentration (from 198+/-37 pg *symbol* ml sup -1 to 277+/-46 pg *symbol* ml sup -1). The peak plasma epinephrine concentration was attenuated by each propofol pretreatment (158+/-35 pg *symbol* ml sup -1, propofol given 2 min before, and 146 + 41 pg *symbol* ml sup -1, propofol given 5 min before; P < 0.05), but neither propofol pretreatment modified the cardiovascular or norepinephrine responses.  相似文献   


6.
Background: Sevoflurane is degraded in vivo in adults yielding plasma concentrations of inorganic fluoride [Fluorine sup -] that, in some patients, approach or exceed the 50-micro Meter theoretical threshold for nephrotoxicity. To determine whether the plasma concentration of inorganic fluoride [Fluorine sup -] after 1-5 MAC *symbol* h sevoflurane approaches a similar concentration in children, the following study in 120 children scheduled for elective surgery was undertaken.

Methods: Children were randomly assigned to one of three treatment groups before induction of anesthesia: group 1 received sevoflurane in air/oxygen 30% (n = 40), group 2 received sevoflurane in 70% N2 O/30% O2 (n = 40), and group 3 received halothane in 70% N2 O/30% O sub 2 (n = 40). Mapleson D or F circuits with fresh gas flows between 3 and 6 l/min were used. Whole blood was collected at induction and termination of anesthesia and at 1, 4, 6, 12, and 18 or 24 h postoperatively for determination of the [Fluorine sup -]. Plasma urea and creatinine concentrations were determined at induction of anesthesia and 18 or 24 h postoperatively.

Results: The mean (+/-SD) duration of sevoflurane anesthesia, 2.7+/-1.6 MAC *symbol* h (range 1.1-8.9 MAC *symbol* h), was similar to that of halothane, 2.5+/-1.1 MAC *symbol* h. The peak [Fluorine sup -] after sevoflurane was recorded at 1 h after termination of the anesthetic in all but three children (whose peak values were recorded between 4 and 6 h postanesthesia). The mean peak [Fluorine sup -] after sevoflurane was 15.8+/-4.6 micro Meter. The [Fluorine sup -] decreased to < 6.2 micro Meter by 24 h postanesthesia. Both the peak [Fluorine sup -] (r2 = 0.50) and the area under the plasma concentration of inorganic fluoride-time curve (r2 = 0.57) increased in parallel with the MAC *symbol* h of sevoflurane. The peak [Fluorine sup -] after halothane, 2.0+/-1.2 micro Meter, was significantly less than that after sevoflurane (P < 0.0001) and did not correlate with the duration of halothane anesthesia (MAC *symbol* h; r2 = 0.007). Plasma urea concentrations decreased 24 h after surgery compared with preoperative values for both anesthetics (P < 0.01), whereas plasma creatinine concentrations did not change significantly with either anesthetic.  相似文献   


7.
Background: Epinephrine is reported to decrease the threshold of intravenous lidocaine-induced convulsions. However, the mechanism underlying this effect is not clear. Therefore, we carried out a study to examine the role of vasopressor-induced hypertension.

Methods: Fifty-six awake Wistar rats were assigned to seven groups of eight. All groups received a continuous intravenous infusion of lidocaine at a rate of 4 mg *symbol* kg sup -1 *symbol* min sup -1 until generalized convulsions occurred. The control group (group C) received plain lidocaine. The acute hypertensive groups received lidocaine with epinephrine (group E), norepinephrine (group N), or phenylephrine (group P) to increase mean arterial blood pressure (MAP) to 150 plus/minus 5 mm Hg. Sodium nitroprusside (SNP) was added to prevent an increase in mean arterial pressure in the remaining three groups (vasopressor-SNP groups).

Results: The acute hypertensive groups required significantly smaller cumulative doses of lidocaine to produce convulsions compared with control (C - 41.5 plus/minus 2.9 > E - 24.1 plus/minus 2.7, N = 27.1 plus/minus 2.8, P = 26.7 plus/minus 2.5 mg *symbol* kg sup -1; values are mean plus/minus SD, P < 0.01) In addition, plasma lidocaine concentrations (C = 11.0 plus/minus 0.7 > E = 7.4 plus/minus 0.5, N = 7.9 plus/minus 0.6, P = 8.1 plus/minus 0.8 micro gram *symbol* ml sup -1, P < 0.01) and brain lidocaine concentrations (C = 50.9 plus/minus 4.5 > E = 32.6 plus/minus 4.2, N - 34.5 plus/minus 4.8, P - 37.1 plus/minus 4.5 micro gram *symbol* g sup -1, P < 0.01) were less in the acute hypertensive groups at the onset of convulsions. In the vasopressor-SNP groups, the plasma and brain lidocaine concentrations at the onset of convulsions returned to the control values, although epinephrine and norepinephrine, but not phenylephrine, still decreased cumulative convulsant doses of lidocaine significantly (P < 0.01) compared with control (E + SNP = 30.8 plus/minus 2.9 < N + SNP = 34.8 plus/minus 2.8, P < 0.01) < P + SNP = 40.2 plus/minus 3.0 mg *symbol* kg sup -1, P < 0.01). The brain/plasma concentration ratios were similar for the seven groups.  相似文献   


8.
Background: Reductions in cerebral metabolic rate may increase the brain's tolerance of ischemia. However, outcome studies suggest that reductions in cerebral metabolic rate produced by anesthetics and by hypothermia may not be equally efficacious. To examine this question, we measured the effects of hypothermia, pentobarbital, and isoflurane on the cerebral metabolic rate for glucose (CMRG) and on the time to the loss of normal membrane ion gradients (terminal ischemic depolarization) of the cortex during complete global ischemia.

Methods: As pericranial temperature was varied between 39 and 25 degrees Celsius in normocapnic halothane-anesthetized rats, CMRG (using14 Carbon-deoxyglucose) or the time to depolarization (using a glass microelectrode in the cortex) after a Potassium sup + -induced cardiac arrest was measured. In other studies, CMRG and depolarization times were measured in normothermic animals (37.7 plus/minus 0.2 degree Celsius) anesthetized with high-dose pentobarbital or isoflurane (both producing burst suppression on the electroencephalogram) or in halothane-anesthetized animals whose temperatures were reduced to 27.4 plus/minus 0.3 degree Celsius. These three states were designed to produce equivalent CMRG values.

Results: As temperature was reduced from 39 to 25 degrees Celsius, CMRG decreased from 66 to 21 micro Meter *symbol* 100 g sup -1 *symbol* min1 (Q10 = 2.30), and depolarization times increased from 76 to 326 s. In similarly anesthetized animals at approximately 27 degrees Celsius, CMRG was 32 plus/minus 4 micro Meter *symbol* 100 g sup -1 *symbol* min sup -1 (mean plus/minus SD), whereas in normothermic pentobarbital- and isoflurane-anesthetized rats, CMRG values were 33 plus/minus 3 and 37 plus/minus 4 micro Meter *symbol* 100 g1 *symbol* min sup -1, respectively (P = 0.072 by one-way analysis of variance). Despite these similar metabolic rates, the times to depolarization were markedly different: for hypothermia it was 253 plus/minus 29 s, for pentobarbital 109 plus/minus 24 s, and for isoflurane 130 plus/minus 28 s (P < 0.0001).  相似文献   


9.
Background: Cisatracurium, one of the ten isomers in atracurium, is a nondepolarizing muscle relaxant with an intermediate duration of action. It is more potent and less likely to release histamine than atracurium. As one of the isomers composing atracurium, it presumably undergoes Hofmann elimination. This study was conducted to describe the pharmacokinetics of cisatracurium and its metabolites and to determine the dose proportionality of cisatracurium after administration of 2 or 4 times the ED95.

Methods: Twenty ASA physical status 1 or 2 patients undergoing elective surgery under nitrous oxide/opioid/barbiturate anesthesia were studied. Patients received a single rapid intravenous bolus dose of 0.1 or 0.2 mg *symbol* kg sup -1 (2 or 4 times the ED95, respectively) cisatracurium. All patients were allowed to recover spontaneously to a train-of-four ratio greater or equal to 0.70 after cisatracurium-induced neuromuscular block. Plasma was extracted, acidified, and stored frozen before analysis for cisatracurium, laudanosine, the monoquaternary acid, and the monoquaternary alcohol metabolite.

Results: The clearances (5.28+/-1.23 vs. 4.66+/- 0.67 ml *symbol* min sup -1 *symbol* kg sup -1) and terminal elimination half-lives (22.4+/-2.7 vs. 25.5+/-4.1 min) were not statistically different between patients receiving 0.1 mg *symbol* kg sup -1 and 0.2 mg *symbol* kg sup -1, respectively. Maximum concentration values for laudanosine averaged 38+/-21 and 103+/-34 ng *symbol* ml sup -1 for patients receiving the 0.1 and 0.2 mg *symbol* kg sup -1 doses, respectively. Maximum concentration values for monoquaternary alcohol averaged 101+/-27 and 253+/-51 ng *symbol* ml sup -1, respectively. Monoquaternary acid was not quantified in any plasma sample.  相似文献   


10.
Background: Activation of the sympathetic nervous system occurs when desflurane is inspired shortly after anesthetic induction and when the inspired concentration of desflurane is rapidly increased during steady-state periods of anesthesia. The purpose of this study was to determine the effectiveness and dose response of fentanyl pretreatment in attenuating the neurocirculatory responses to desflurane in healthy human volunteers.

Methods: After Institutional Research Review Board approval, three study groups were selected and, in random order, received either placebo (n = 10), a 2.5-micro gram *symbol* kg sup -1 intravenous bolus of fentanyl citrate followed by a continuous infusion of 1 micro gram *symbol* kg sup -1 *symbol* h sup -1 (n = 9), or a 5.0-micro gram *symbol* kg sup -1 intravenous bolus followed by an infusion of 2 micro gram *symbol* kg sup -1 *symbol* h sup -1 (n = 11) before the administration of desflurane. Arterial (MAP) and central venous (CVP) pressures were measured directly, and heart rate (HR) was determined indirectly. Efferent muscle sympathetic nerve activity (SNA) was recorded from the peroneal nerve by microneurography. After neurocirculatory recordings at conscious unmedicated baseline and 12 min after fentanyl administration, anesthetic induction was carried out with 2.0 mg *symbol* kg sup -1 propofol and 0.2 mg *symbol* kg sup -1 vecuronium. Neurocirculatory measurements were repeated beginning 2 min after induction when desflurane was given via mask (semiclosed circle system, 6 l/min fresh gas flow, 100% Oxygen2) in three incremental 1-min steps (3.6%, 7.2% and 11%). Intubation occurred 10 min after propofol administration. Twenty minutes after intubation, recordings were obtained during two steady-state periods during which end-tidal concentrations had achieved 5.4% (0.75 MAC) and 11% (1.5 MAC) desflurane for at least 10 min. Data also were obtained during the rapid increase in the inspired gas concentration from 5.4% to 11% ("transition").

Results: Neurocirculatory variables did not differ between the three groups at conscious baseline, after fentanyl, and during steady-state periods of anesthesia. Propofol administration significantly reduced SNA and MAP. The MAP reduction was enhanced in the fentanyl-treated groups. After induction, the increases in SNA and MAP associated with the administration of desflurane by mask were not significantly reduced by fentanyl. The transition from 5.4% to 11% desflurane resulted in increases in SNA, HR, MAP, and fentanyl administration significantly attenuated the HR and MAP components. At the 11% steady-state measurement period, CVP was increased and MAP was decreased from conscious baseline, and these changes were not modified by fentanyl.  相似文献   


11.
Background: Anesthetic agents influence central regulations. This study investigated the effects of methohexital anesthesia on renal and hormonal responses to acute sodium and water loading in dogs in the absence of surgical stress.

Methods: Fourteen experiments (two in each dog) were performed in seven well-trained, chronically tracheotomized beagle dogs kept in highly standardized environmental and dietary conditions (2.5 mmol sodium and 91 ml water/kg body weight daily). Experiments lasted 3 h, while the dogs were conscious (7 experiments) or, after 1 h control, while they were anesthetized (7 experiments) with methohexital (initial dose 6.6 mg/kg body weight and maintenance infusion 0.34 mg *symbol* min sup -1 *symbol* kg sup -1 body weight) over a period of 2 h. In both experiments, extracellular volume expansion was performed by intravenous infusion of a balanced isoosmolar electrolyte solution (0.5 ml *symbol* min sup -1 *symbol* kg sup -1 body weight). Normal arterial blood gases were maintained by controlled mechanical ventilation. In another five dogs the same protocol was used, and vasopressin (0.05 mU *symbol* min sup -1 *symbol* kg sup -1 body weight) was infused intravenously during methohexital anesthesia.

Results: Values are given as means. During methohexital anesthesia, mean arterial pressure decreased from 108 to 101 mmHg, and heart rate increased from 95 to 146 beats/min. Renal sodium excretion decreased; urine volume increased; and urine osmolarity decreased from 233 to 155 mosm/l, whereas plasma osmolarity increased from 301 to 312 mosm/l because of an increase in plasma sodium concentration from 148 to 154 mmol/l. Plasma renin activity, plasma aldosterone concentration, plasma atrial natriuretic peptide, and plasma antidiuretic hormone concentrations (range 1.8-2.8 pg/ml) did not change in either protocol. In the presence of exogenous vasopressin (antidiuretic hormone 3.3 pg/ml), water diuresis did not occur, and neither plasma osmolarity nor the plasma concentration of sodium changed.  相似文献   


12.
Background: Some patients who undergo cerebral aneurysm surgery require cardiopulmonary bypass and deep hypothermic circulatory arrest. During bypass, these patients often are given large doses of a supplemental anesthetic agent in the hope that additional cerebral protection will be provided. Pharmacologic brain protection, however, has been associated with undesirable side effects. These side effects were evaluated in patients who received large doses of propofol.

Methods: Thirteen neurosurgical patients underwent cardiopulmonary bypass and deep hypothermic circulatory arrest to facilitate clip application to a giant or otherwise high-risk cerebral aneurysm. Electroencephalographic burst suppression was established before bypass with an infusion of propofol, and the infusion was continued until the end of surgery. Hemodynamic and echocardiographic measurements were made before and during the prebypass propofol infusion and again after bypass. Emergence time also was determined.

Results: Prebypass propofol at 243 plus/minus 57 micro gram *symbol* kg sup -1 *symbol* min sup -1 decreased vascular resistance from 34 plus/minus 8 to 27 plus/minus 8 units without changing heart rate, arterial or filling pressures, cardiac index, stroke volume, or ejection fraction. Propofol blood concentration was 8 plus/minus 2 micro gram/ml. Myocardial wall motion appeared hyperdynamic at the end of cardiopulmonary bypass, and all patients were weaned therefrom without inotropic support. After bypass, vascular resistance decreased further, and cardiovascular performance was improved compared to baseline values. Nine of the 13 patients emerged from anesthesia and were able to follow commands at 3.1 plus/minus 1.4 h. Three others had strokes and a fourth had cerebral swelling.  相似文献   


13.
Background: The authors' purpose in this study was to compare prospectively four different anesthetic induction and maintenance techniques using nitrous oxide with halothane and/or propofol for vomiting and recovery after outpatient tonsillectomy and adenoidectomy procedures in children.

Methods: Eighty unpremedicated children, aged 3-10 yr, were assigned randomly to four groups: group H/H, 0.5-2% halothane induction/halothane maintenance; group P/P, 3-5 mg *symbol* kg sup -1 propofol induction and 0.1-0.3 mg *symbol* kg sup -1 *symbol* min sup -1 propofol maintenance; group H/P, 0.1-0.3 mg *symbol* kg sup -1 *symbol* min sup -1 halothane induction/propofol maintenance; and group P/H, 3-5 mg *symbol* kg sup -1 propofol induction and 0.5-2% halothane maintenance. Nitrous oxide (67%) and oxygen (33%) were administered in all the groups. Other treatments and procedures were standardized intra- and postoperatively. Results of postoperative vomiting and recovery were analyzed in the first 6 h and beyond 6 h.

Results: Logistic regression showed that vomiting occurred 3.5 times as often when halothane was used for maintenance of anesthesia (groups H/H and P/H) compared with the use of propofol (groups P/P and H/P; Odds Ratio 3.5; 95% confidence interval 1.3 and 9.4, respectively; P = 0.012). A significant association between vomiting (< 6 h: yes/no) and discharge times (> 6 h: yes/no) (Odd's Ratio = 3.6; 95% confidence interval: 1.02, 12.4, respectively) (P = 0.046) was shown. However, no significant differences among the groups in the incidence of vomiting beyond 6 h, recurrent vomiting, or hospital discharge times were shown.  相似文献   


14.
Background: Ropivacaine is a new amide local anesthetic, having therapeutic properties similar to those of bupivacaine but with a wider margin of safety. Bupivacaine is probably the most commonly used drug in obstetric epidural analgesia, even though laboratory studies have suggested that pregnancy increases the cardiotoxicity of bupivacaine but not of other local anesthetics. The current study was designed to reevaluate, in a random and blinded fashion, the systemic toxicity of bupivacaine and ropivacaine in nonpregnant and pregnant sheep.

Methods: Chronically prepared nonpregnant and pregnant ewes were randomized to receive an intravenous infusion of ropivacaine or bupivacaine at a constant rate of 0.5 mg *symbol* kg sup -1 *symbol* min sup -1 until circulatory collapse. The investigators were blinded to the identity of local anesthetic. Heart rate, arterial blood pressure, and cardiac rhythm were monitored throughout the study. Arterial blood samples were obtained before infusion and at the onset of toxic manifestations, which appeared in the following sequence: convulsions, hypotension, apnea, and circulatory collapse. Serum drug concentrations and protein binding were determined. Blood pH and gas tensions were measured.

Results: There were no significant differences between nonpregnant and pregnant animals in the doses or serum concentrations of either drug required to elicit toxic manifestations. In nonpregnant animals, similar doses and serum concentrations of ropivacaine and bupivacaine were associated with the onset of convulsions and circulatory collapse. In pregnant ewes, greater doses of ropivacaine as compared to bupivacaine were required to produce convulsions (7.5 plus/minus 0.5 vs. 5.0 plus/minus 0.6 mg *symbol* kg sup -1) and circulatory collapse (12.9 plus/minus 0.8 vs. 8.5 plus/minus 1.2 mg *symbol* kg sup -1). The corresponding serum concentrations of ropivacaine were similar to those of bupivacaine. Pregnancy did not affect the serum protein binding of either drug. The proportion of animals manifesting a malignant ventricular arrhythmia as the terminal event was similar among all groups.  相似文献   


15.
Background: Nitric oxide (NO) formed from L-arginine is exhaled by mammals and regulates pulmonary vascular tone. Little is known about how its formation is stimulated.

Methods: The concentration of NO in exhaled air was monitored by chemiluminescence in pentobarbital-anesthetized rabbits receiving mechanical ventilation by tracheostomy with graded positive end-expiratory pressure (PEEP).

Results: Introduction of PEEP (2.5-15 cmH2 O) elicited dose-dependent and reproducible increments in exhaled NO and in arterial oxygen tension (PaO2). The increase in exhaled NO exhibited a biphasic pattern, with an initial peak followed by a partial reversal during the 4-min period at each level of PEEP. Thus, at a PEEP of 10 cmH sub 2 O, exhaled NO initially increased from 19 plus/minus 4 to 30 plus/minus 5 parts per billion (ppb) (P < 0.001, n = 9) and then decreased to 27 plus/minus 5 ppb (P < 0.005) at the end of the 4-min observation period. Simultaneously, PaO2 increased from 75 plus/minus 12 mmHg in the control situation to 105 plus/minus 11 mmHg (P < 0.05) at a PEEP of 10 cmH2 O. After bilateral vagotomy, including bilateral transection of the depressor nerves, the increase in exhaled NO in response to PEEP was significantly reduced (P < 0.01). Thus, after vagotomy, a PEEP of 10 cmH2 O elicited an increase in the concentration of exhaled NO from 13 plus/minus 3 to 17 plus/minus 3 ppb (n = 7). Vagotomy did not affect the baseline concentration of NO in exhaled air. The PEEP-induced increments in PaO2 were not affected by the NO synthase inhibitor L-Nomega-arginine-methylester (30 mg *symbol* kg sup -1 intravenously). In open-chest experiments, PEEP (10 cmH2 O) induced a reduction in cardiac output from 317 plus/minus 36 to 235 plus/minus 30 ml *symbol* min sup -1 and an increase in exhaled NO from 23 plus/minus 6 to 30 plus/minus 7 ppb (P < 0.05, n = 5). Reduction in cardiac output from 300 plus/minus 67 to 223 plus/minus 52 ml *symbol* min sup -1 by partial obstruction of the pulmonary artery did not significantly increase exhaled NO (from 23 plus/minus 7 to 25 plus/minus 6, difference not significant; n = 3).  相似文献   


16.
Background: Although a positive inotropic effect of hypertonic saline has been demonstrated in isolated cardiac tissue as well as in animal preparations, no information exists about a possible positive inotropic action of hypertonic saline in humans. The aim of this investigation was to determine whether a clinically relevant positive inotropic effect can be demonstrated in humans.

Methods: Twenty-six patients without cardiovascular disease were randomized to receive 4 ml/kg of either 7.2% hypertonic saline/6% hetastarch or 6% hetastarch (control) at a rate of 1 ml *symbol* kg sup -1 *symbol* min sup -1 while under general endotracheal anesthesia. Transesophageal echocardiography was used to evaluate left ventricular function. Arterial pressure, heart rate, and left ventricular end-systolic and end-diastolic diameter, area, and wall thickness were measured immediately before and after administration of either solution. Fractional area change, end-systolic wall stress, and the area under the end-systolic pressure-length relationship curve (ESPLRarea) were calculated. ESPLRarea was used to assess left ventricular contractility.

Results: Administration of hypertonic saline/hetastarch resulted in a significant decrease of mean arterial pressure and end-systolic wall stress from 77 plus/minus 14 (mean plus/minus SD) to 64 plus/minus 17 mmHg (P < 0.01) and from 52 plus/minus 14 to 32 plus/minus 11 103 dyne/cm2 (P > 0.01), respectively. End-diastolic area and fractional area change increased from 16.5 plus/minus 2.9 to 21.7 plus/minus 3.3 cm2 (P < 0.01) and from 0.53 plus/minus 0.07 to 0.70 plus/minus 0.06 (P < 0.01), respectively, whereas there was only a minor change of ESPLRarea from 38 plus/minus 13 to 44 plus/minus 13 mmHg.cm (P < 0.05).  相似文献   


17.
Background: Tracheal intubation frequently results in reversible bronchoconstriction. Propofol has been reported to minimize this response in healthy patients and in asthma patients, but may be unsuitable for hemodynamically unstable patients for whom etomidate may be preferable. The current study examined respiratory resistance after tracheal intubation after induction with either thiopental, etomidate, or propofol. A supratherapeutic dose of etomidate was used to test the hypothesis that the bronchoconstrictive response could be minimized by deep intravenous anesthesia.

Methods: Seventy-seven studies were conducted in 75 patients. Anesthesia was induced with either 2.5 mg/kg propofol, 0.4 mg/kg etomidate, or 5 mg/kg thiopental. Respiratory resistance was measured at 2 min after induction.

Results: Respiratory resistance at 2 min was 8.1+/-3.4 cmH sub 2 O *symbol* l sup -1 *symbol* s (mean+/-SD) for patients receiving propofol versus 11.3+/-5.3 for patients receiving etomidate and 12.3+/-7.9 for patients receiving thiopental (P less than or equal to 0.05 for propofol vs. either etomidate or thiopental).  相似文献   


18.
Background: Heart rate variability in the frequency domain has been proposed to reflect cardiac autonomic control. Therefore, measurement of heart rate variability may be useful to assess the effect of epidural anesthesia on cardiac autonomic tone. Accordingly, the effects of preganglionic cardiac sympathetic blockade by segmental epidural anesthesia were evaluated in humans on spectral power of heart rate variability. Specifically, the hypothesis that cardiac sympathetic blockade attenuates low-frequency spectral power, assumed to reflect cardiac sympathetic modulation, was tested.

Methods: Ten subjects were studied while supine and during a 15-min 40- degrees head-up tilt both before and after cardiac sympathetic blockade by segmental thoracic epidural anesthesia (sensory block: C6-T6). ECG, arterial pressure, and respiratory excursion (Whitney gauge) were recorded, and a fast-Fourier-transformation was applied to 512-s data segments of heart rate derived from the digitized ECG at the end of each intervention.

Results: With cardiac sympathetic blockade alone and the subjects supine, both low-frequency (LF, 0.06-0.15 Hz) and high-frequency (HF, 0.15-0.80 Hz) spectral power remained unchanged. During tilt, epidural anesthesia attenuated the evoked increase in heart rate (+11 *symbol* min sup -1 + 7 SD vs. +6 + 7, P - 0.024). However, while during tilt cardiac sympathetic blockade significantly decreased the LF/HF ratio (3.68 plus/minus 2.52 vs. 2.83 plus/minus 2.15, P = 0.041 vs. tilt before sympathetic blockade), a presumed marker of sympathovagal interaction, absolute and fractional LF and HF power did not change.  相似文献   


19.
Background: No complete pharmacokinetic profile of propofol is yet available in children younger than 3 yr, whereas clinical studies have demonstrated that both induction and maintenance doses of propofol are increased with respect to body weight in this age group compared to older children and adults. This study was therefore undertaken to determine the pharmacokinetics of propofol after administration of a single dose in aged children 1-3 yr requiring anesthesia for dressing change.

Methods: This study was performed in 12 children admitted to the burn unit and in whom burn surface area was less than or equal to 12% of total body surface area. Exclusion criteria were: unstable hemodynamic condition, inappropriate fluid loading, associated pulmonary injury, or burn injury older than 2 days. Propofol (4 mg *symbol* kg sup -1) plus fentanyl (2.5 micro gram *symbol* kg sup -1) was administered while the children were bathed and the burn area cleaned during which the children breathed spontaneously a mixture of oxygen and nitrous oxide (50:50). Venous blood samples of 300 micro liter were obtained at 5, 15, 30, 60, 90, and 120 min, and 3, 4, 8, and 12 h after injection; an earlier sample was obtained from 8 of 12 children. The blood concentration curves obtained for individual children were analyzed by three different methods: noncompartmental analysis, mixed-effects population model, and standard two-stage analysis.

Results: Using noncompartmental analysis, total clearance of propofol (+/-SD) was 0.053+/-0.013 l *symbol* kg sup -1 *symbol* min sup -1, volume of distribution at steady state 9.5+/-3.7 l *symbol* kg sup -1, and mean residence time 188+/-85 min. Propofol pharmacokinetics were best described by a weight-proportional three-compartmental model in both population and two-stage analysis. Estimated and derived pharmacokinetic parameters were similar using these two pharmacokinetic approaches. Results of population versus two-stage analysis are as follow: systemic clearance 0.049 versus 0.048 l *symbol* kg sup -1 *symbol* min sup -1, volume of central compartment 1.03 versus 0.95 l *symbol* kg sup -1, volume of distribution at steady state 8.09 versus 8.17 l *symbol* kg sup -1.  相似文献   


20.
Background: Propofol is a short-acting intravenous induction agent that induces cardiovascular depression but without significant effect no intrinsic myocardial contractility in various species. However, its effects on diseased myocardium remain unknown.

Methods: The effects of propofol (1, 3, and 10 micro gram *symbol* ml sup -1) on the intrinsic contractility of left ventricular papillary muscles from normal hamsters and those with hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (strain BIO 14.6, aged 6 months) were investigated in vitro (Krebs-Henseleit solution, 29 degrees Celsius, pH 7.40, Calcium sup +1 2.5 mmol *symbol* l [1], stimulation frequency 3/min).

Results: Cardiac hypertrophy (143 plus/minus 13%, P < 0.001) was observed in cardiomyopathic hamsters. The contractility of papillary muscles from hamsters with cardiomyopathy was less than that of controls, as shown by the decrease in maximum shortening velocity (29%, P < 0.03) and active isometric force (-51%, P < 0.03) and active isometric force (-51%, P < 0.001). Propofol did not induce any significant effect on contraction, relaxation, and contraction-relaxation coupling under low and high loads in normal hamsters. The effects of propofol were not significantly different between normal hamsters and those with cardiomyopathy. A slight but significant increase in maximum unloaded shortening velocity was observed in cardiomyopathic hamsters at 3 micro gram *symbol* ml sup -1 (4 plus/minus 6%, P < 0.05) and 10 micro gram *symbol* ml sup -1 (7 plus/minus 6%, P < 0.05).  相似文献   


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