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1.
Background: Parameters determining carbon monoxide (CO) concentrations produced by anesthetic breakdown have not been adequately studied in clinical situations. The authors hypothesized that these data will identify modifiable risk factors.

Methods: Carbon monoxide concentrations were measured when partially desiccated barium hydroxide lime was reacted with isoflurane (1.5%) and desflurane (7.5%) in a Draeger Narkomed 2 anesthesia machine with a latex breathing bag substituting for a patient. Additional experiments determined the effects of carbon dioxide (0 or 350 ml/min), fresh gas flow rates (1 or 4 l/min), minute ventilation (6 or 18 l/min), or absorbent quantity (1 or 2 canisters). End-tidal anesthetic concentrations were adjusted according to a monochromatic infrared monitor.

Results: Desflurane produced approximately 20 times more CO than isoflurane when completely dried absorbents were used. Peak CO concentrations approached 100,000 ppm with desflurane. Traces of water remaining after a 66-h drying time (one weekend) markedly reduced the generation of CO compared with 2 weeks of drying. Reducing the quantity of desiccated absorbent by 50% reduced the total CO production by 40% in the first hour. Increasing the fresh gas flow rate from 1 to 4 l/min increased CO production by 67% in the first hour but simultaneously decreased average inspiratory concentrations by 53%. Carbon dioxide decreased CO production by 12% in completely desiccated absorbents.  相似文献   


2.
Background: Carbon monoxide (CO) is produced by reaction of isoflurane, enflurane, and desflurane in desiccated carbon dioxide absorbents. The inspiratory CO concentration depends on the dryness and identity of the absorbent and anesthetic. The adaptation of existing mathematical models to a rebreathing circuit allows identification of patient factors that predispose to more severe exposures, as identified by carboxyhemoglobin concentration.

Methods: From our companion study, the authors used quantitative in vitro CO production data for 60 min at 7.5% desflurane or 1.5% isoflurane at 1 l/min fresh gas flow. The carboxyhemoglobin concentration was calculated by iteratively solving the Coburn Forster Kane equation modified for a rebreathing system that incorporates the removal of CO by patient absorption. Demonstrating good fit of predicted carboxyhemoglobin concentrations to published data from animal and human exposures validated the model. Carboxyhemoglobin concentrations were predicted for exposures of various severity, patients of different sizes, hematocrit, and fraction of inspired oxygen.

Results: The calculated carboxyhemoglobin concentrations closely predicted the experimental results of other investigators, thereby validating the model. These equations indicate the severity of CO poisoning is inversely related to the hemoglobin quantity of a subject. Fraction of inspired oxygen had the greatest effect in patients of small size with low hematocrit values, where equilibrium and not the rate of uptake determined carboxyhemoglobin concentrations.  相似文献   


3.
Background: Increased carboxyhemoglobin concentrations in patients receiving inhalation anesthetics (desflurane, enflurane, and isoflurane) have been reported. Recent in vitro studies suggest that dry carbon dioxide absorbents may allow the production of carbon monoxide.

Methods: The authors used high fresh oxygen flow (5 or 10 l/min) through a conventional circle breathing system of an anesthesia machine for 24 or 48 h to produce absorbent drying. Initial studies used 10 l/min oxygen flow with the reservoir bag removed or with the reservoir bag left in place during absorbent drying (this increases resistance to gas flow through the canister). A third investigation evaluated a lower flow rate (5 l/min) for absorbent drying. Water content of the absorbent and temperature were measured. Pigs received a 1.0 (human) minimum alveolar concentration desflurane anesthetic (7.5%) for 240 min using a 1 l/min oxygen flow rate with dried absorbent. Carbon monoxide concentrations in the circuit and carboxyhemoglobin concentrations in the pigs were measured.

Results: Pigs anesthetized with desflurane using Baralyme exposed to 48 h of 10 l/min oxygen flow (reservoir bag removed) had extremely high carboxyhemoglobin concentrations (more than 80%). Circuit carbon monoxide concentrations during desflurane anesthesia using absorbents exposed to 10 l/min oxygen flow (reservoir bag, 24 h) reached peak values of 8,800 to 13,600 ppm, depending on the absorbent used. Carboxyhemoglobin concentrations reached peak values of 73% (Baralyme) and 53% (soda lime). The water content of Baralyme decreased from 12.1 +/- 0.3% (mean +/- SEM) to as low as 1.9 +/- 0.4% at the bottom of the lower canister (oxygen flow direction during drying was from bottom to top). Absorbent temperatures in the bottom canister increased to temperatures as high as 50 [degree sign] Celsius. With the reservoir bag in place during drying (10 l/min oxygen flow), water removal from Baralyme was insufficient to produce carbon monoxide (lowest water content = 5.5%). Use of 5 l/min oxygen flow (reservoir bag removed) for 24 h did not reduce water content sufficiently to produce carbon dioxide with desflurane.  相似文献   


4.
Background: Desiccated carbon dioxide absorbents degrade desflurane, enflurane, and isoflurane to carbon monoxide (CO) in vitro and in anesthesia machines, which can result in significant clinical CO exposure. Carbon monoxide formation is highest from desflurane, and greater with Baralyme than with soda lime. Degradation is inversely related to absorbent water content, and thus the greatest CO concentrations occur with desflurane and fully desiccated Baralyme. This investigation tested the hypothesis that rehydrating desiccated absorbent can diminish CO formation.

Methods: Baralyme was dried to constant weight. Carbon monoxide formation from desflurane and desiccated Baralyme was determined in sealed 20.7-ml vials without adding water, after adding 10% of the normal water content (1.3% water), and after adding 100% of the normal water content (13% water) to the dry absorbent. Similar measurements were made using an anesthesia machine and circle system. Carbon monoxide was measured by gas chromatography-mass spectrometry.

Results: Carbon monoxide formation from desflurane in vitro was decreased from 10,700 ppm with desiccated Baralyme to 715 ppm and less than 100 ppm, respectively, when 1.3% and 13% water were added. Complete rehydration also decreased CO formation from enflurane and isoflurane to undetectable concentrations. Desflurane degradation in an anesthesia machine produced 2,500 ppm CO in the circuit, which was reduced to less than 180 ppm when the full complement of water (13%) was added to the dried absorbent.  相似文献   


5.
Mechanistic Aspects of Carbon Monoxide Formation from Volatile Anesthetics   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
Background: Desflurane, enflurane and isoflurane can be degraded to carbon monoxide (CO) by carbon dioxide absorbents, whereas sevoflurane and halothane form negligible amounts of CO. Carbon monoxide formation is greater with drier absorbent, and with barium hydroxide, than with soda lime. The mechanism, role of absorbent composition and water, and anesthetic structures determining CO formation are unknown. This investigation examined sequential steps in anesthetic degradation to CO.

Methods: Carbon monoxide formation from anesthetics and desiccated barium hydroxide lime or soda lime was determined at equimole from deuterium-substituted anesthetics was also quantified. Proton abstraction from anesthetics by strong base was determined by deuterium isotope exchange. A reactive chemical intermediate was trapped and identified by gas chromatography-mass spectrometry. The source of the oxygen in CO was identified by18 O incorporation.

Results: Desflurane, enflurane, and isoflurane (difluoromethylethyl ethers), but not sevoflurane (monofluoromethyl ether), methoxyflurane (methyl-ethyl ether), or halothane (alkane) were degraded to CO. The amount of CO formed was desflurane >or= to enflurane > isoflurane at equiMAC and enflurane > desflurane > isoflurane at equimole concentrations. Proton abstraction from the difluoromethoxy carbon was greater with potassium than with sodium hydroxide, but unmeasurable with barium hydroxide. Carbon monoxide formation was correlated (r = 0.95-1.00) with difluoromethoxy (enflurane > desflurane > isoflurane >or= to methoxyflurane = sevoflurane = 0) but not ethyl carbon proton abstraction. Deuterium substitution on enflurane and desflurane diminished CO formation. Chemical trapping showed formation of a difluorocarbene intermediate from enflurane and desflurane. Incorporation of H218 O in barium hydroxide lime resulted in C18 O formation from unlabeled enflurane and desflurane.  相似文献   


6.
BACKGROUND: Carbon monoxide (CO) is produced by reaction of isoflurane, enflurane, and desflurane in desiccated carbon dioxide absorbents. The inspiratory CO concentration depends on the dryness and identity of the absorbent and anesthetic. The adaptation of existing mathematical models to a rebreathing circuit allows identification of patient factors that predispose to more severe exposures, as identified by carboxyhemoglobin concentration. METHODS: From our companion study, the authors used quantitative in vitro CO production data for 60 min at 7.5% desflurane or 1.5% isoflurane at 1 l/min fresh gas flow. The carboxyhemoglobin concentration was calculated by iteratively solving the Coburn Forster Kane equation modified for a rebreathing system that incorporates the removal of CO by patient absorption. Demonstrating good fit of predicted carboxyhemoglobin concentrations to published data from animal and human exposures validated the model. Carboxyhemoglobin concentrations were predicted for exposures of various severity, patients of different sizes, hematocrit, and fraction of inspired oxygen. RESULTS: The calculated carboxyhemoglobin concentrations closely predicted the experimental results of other investigators, thereby validating the model. These equations indicate the severity of CO poisoning is inversely related to the hemoglobin quantity of a subject. Fraction of inspired oxygen had the greatest effect in patients of small size with low hematocrit values, where equilibrium and not the rate of uptake determined carboxyhemoglobin concentrations. CONCLUSION: This model predicts that patients with low hemoglobin quantities will have more severe CO exposures based on the attainment of a higher carboxyhemoglobin concentration. This includes patients of small size (pediatric population) and patients with anemia.  相似文献   

7.
Holak EJ  Mei DA  Dunning MB  Gundamraj R  Noseir R  Zhang L  Woehlck HJ 《Anesthesia and analgesia》2003,96(3):757-64, table of contents
Isoflurane, enflurane, sevoflurane, and especially desflurane produce carbon monoxide (CO) during reaction with desiccated absorbents. Of these, sevoflurane is the least studied. We investigated the dependence of CO production from sevoflurane on absorbent temperature, minute ventilation (VE), and fresh gas flow rates. We measured absorbent temperature and in vitro CO concentrations when desiccated Baralyme reacted with 1 minimum alveolar anesthetic concentration of (2.1%) sevoflurane at 2.3-, 5.0-, and 10.0-L VE. Mathematical modeling of carboxyhemoglobin concentrations was performed using an existing iterative method. Rapid breakdown of sevoflurane prevented the attainment of 1 minimum alveolar anesthetic concentration with low fresh gas flow rates. CO concentrations increased with VE and with absorbent temperatures exceeding 80 degrees C, but concentrations decreased with higher fresh gas flow rates. Average CO concentrations were 150 and 600 ppm at 2.3- and 5.0-L VE; however, at 10 L, over 11,000 ppm of CO were produced followed by an explosion and fire. Methanol and formaldehyde were present and may have contributed to the flammable mixture but were not quantitated. Mathematical modeling of exposures indicates that in average cases, only patients < or =25 kg, or severely anemic patients, are at risk of carboxyhemoglobin concentrations >10% during the first 60 min of anesthesia. IMPLICATIONS: Sevoflurane breakdown in desiccated absorbents is expected to result in only mild carbon monoxide (CO) exposure. Completely dry absorbent and high minute ventilation rates may degrade sevoflurane to extremely large CO concentrations. Serious CO poisoning or spontaneous ignition of flammable gases within the breathing circuit are possible in extreme circumstances.  相似文献   

8.
BACKGROUND: Consequences of volatile anesthetic degradation by carbon dioxide absorbents that contain strong base include formation of compound A from sevoflurane, formation of carbon monoxide (CO) and CO toxicity from desflurane, enflurane and isoflurane, delayed inhalation induction, and increased anesthetic costs. Amsorb (Armstrong Ltd., Coleraine, Northern Ireland) is a new absorbent that does not contain strong base and does not form CO or compound A in vitro. This investigation compared Amsorb, Baralyme (Chemetron Medical Division, Allied Healthcare Products, St. Louis, MO), and sodalime effects on CO (from desflurane and isoflurane) and compound A formation, carboxyhemoglobin (COHb) concentrations, and anesthetic degradation in a clinically relevant porcine in vivo model. METHODS: Pigs were anesthetized with desflurane, isoflurane, or sevoflurane, using fresh or partially dehydrated Amsorb, Baralyme, and new and old formulations of sodalime. Anesthetic concentrations in the fresh (preabsorber), inspired (postabsorber), and end-tidal gas were measured, as were inspired CO and compound A concentrations and blood oxyhemoglobin and COHb concentrations. RESULTS: For desflurane and isoflurane, the order of inspired CO and COHb formation was dehydrated Baralyme > soda-lime > Amsorb. For desflurane and Baralyme, peak CO was 9,700 +/- 5,100 parts per million (ppm), and the increase in COHb was 37 +/- 14%. CO and COHb increases were undetectable with Amsorb. Oxyhemoglobin desaturation occurred with desflurane and Baralyme but not Amsorb or sodalime. The gap between inspired and end-tidal desflurane and isoflurane did not differ between the various dehydrated absorbents. Neither fresh nor dehydrated Amsorb caused compound A formation from sevoflurane. In contrast, Baralyme and sodalime caused 20-40 ppm compound A. The gap between inspired and end-tidal sevoflurane did not differ between fresh absorbents, but was Amsorb < sodalime < Baralyme with dehydrated absorbents. CONCLUSION: Amsorb caused minimal if any CO formation, minimal compound A formation regardless of absorbent hydration, and the least amount of sevoflurane degradation. An absorbent like Amsorb, which does not contain strong base or cause anesthetic degradation and formation of toxic products, may have benefit with respect to patient safety, inhalation induction, and anesthetic consumption (cost).  相似文献   

9.
After institutional approval, we studied the effect of animal size, anesthetic concentration, and fresh gas flow (FGF) rate on inspired carbon monoxide (CO) and carboxyhemoglobin (COHb) during anesthesia in swine, using soda lime previously dried to 1 +/- 0.1% water content. To ascertain the effect of anesthesia, eight adult pigs were anesthetized with either 1 minimum alveolar anesthetic concentration (MAC) desflurane or isoflurane and, to characterize the effect of the FGF rate, it was doubled in four pigs. To determine the effect of animal size, four small and four large pigs received 1 MAC desflurane or isoflurane, and to determine the effect of the anesthetic concentration, a group of four swine was exposed to 0.5 MAC. CO and COHb concentrations were larger with desflurane (5500 +/- 980 ppm and 57.90% +/- 0.50%, respectively) than with isoflurane (800 ppm and 17.8% +/- 2.14%, respectively), especially in the small animals. Increasing the FGF rate significantly reduced peak CO and COHb concentrations resulting from both anesthetics; however, when each anesthetic was reduced to 0.5 MAC, the concentrations obtained were similar. We conclude that CO intoxication is more severe with desflurane than with isoflurane, that small animals are at higher risk for CO poisoning, and that low FGF can increase COHb concentrations. IMPLICATIONS: The present study shows that the use of desflurane with desiccated carbon dioxide absorbents in pediatric anesthesia can produce a dangerous carbon dioxide intoxication, especially with low-flow anesthesia.  相似文献   

10.
BACKGROUND: Potent inhaled anesthetics degrade in the presence of the strong bases (sodium hydroxide or potassium hydroxide) in carbon dioxide (CO2) absorbents. A new absorbent, Amsorb (Armstrong Medical Ltd., Coleraine, Northern Ireland), does not employ these strong bases. This study compared the scavenging efficacy and compound A production of two commercially available absorbents (soda lime and barium hydroxide lime) with Amsorb in humans undergoing general anesthesia. METHODS: Four healthy volunteers were anesthetized on different days with desflurane, sevoflurane, enflurane, and isoflurane. End-tidal carbon dioxide (ETCO2) and anesthetic concentrations were measured with infrared spectroscopy; blood pressure and arterial blood gases were obtained from a radial artery catheter. Each anesthetic exposure lasted 3 h, during which the three fresh (normally hydrated) CO2 absorbents were used for a period of 1 h each. Anesthesia was administered with a fresh gas flow rate of 2 l/min of air:oxygen (50:50). Tidal volume was 10 ml/kg; respiratory rate was 8 breaths/min. Arterial blood gases were obtained at baseline and after each hour. Inspired concentrations of compound A were measured after 15, 30, and 60 min of anesthetic administration for each CO2 absorbent. RESULTS: Arterial blood gases and ETCO2 were not different among three CO2 absorbents. During sevoflurane, compound A formed with barium hydroxide lime and soda lime, but not with Amsorb. CONCLUSIONS: This new CO2 absorbent effectively scavenged CO2 and was not associated with compound A production.  相似文献   

11.
Background: Consequences of volatile anesthetic degradation by carbon dioxide absorbents that contain strong base include formation of compound A from sevoflurane, formation of carbon monoxide (CO) and CO toxicity from desflurane, enflurane and isoflurane, delayed inhalation induction, and increased anesthetic costs. Amsorb(R) (Armstrong Ltd., Coleraine, Northern Ireland) is a new absorbent that does not contain strong base and does not form CO or compound A in vitro. This investigation compared Amsorb(R), Baralyme(R) (Chemetron Medical Division, Allied Healthcare Products, St. Louis, MO), and sodalime effects on CO (from desflurane and isoflurane) and compound A formation, carboxyhemoglobin (COHb) concentrations, and anesthetic degradation in a clinically relevant porcine in vivo model.

Methods: Pigs were anesthetized with desflurane, isoflurane, or sevoflurane, using fresh or partially dehydrated Amsorb(R), Baralyme(R), and new and old formulations of sodalime. Anesthetic concentrations in the fresh (preabsorber), inspired (postabsorber), and end-tidal gas were measured, as were inspired CO and compound A concentrations and blood oxyhemoglobin and COHb concentrations.

Results: For desflurane and isoflurane, the order of inspired CO and COHb formation was dehydrated Baralyme(R) >> soda-lime > Amsorb(R). For desflurane and Baralyme(R), peak CO was 9,700 +/- 5,100 parts per million (ppm), and the increase in COHb was 37 +/- 14%. CO and COHb increases were undetectable with Amsorb(R). Oxyhemoglobin desaturation occurred with desflurane and Baralyme(R) but not Amsorb(R) or sodalime. The gap between inspired and end-tidal desflurane and isoflurane did not differ between the various dehydrated absorbents. Neither fresh nor dehydrated Amsorb(R) caused compound A formation from sevoflurane. In contrast, Baralyme(R) and sodalime caused 20-40 ppm compound A. The gap between inspired and end-tidal sevoflurane did not differ between fresh absorbents, but was Amsorb(R) < sodalime < Baralyme(R) with dehydrated absorbents.  相似文献   


12.
Background: The chemical breakdown of isoflurane, enflurane, or desflurane in dried carbon dioxide absorbents may produce carbon monoxide. Some mass spectrometers can give false indications of enflurane during anesthetic breakdown.

Methods: During clinical anesthesia with isoflurane or desflurane, the presence of carbon monoxide in respiratory gas was confirmed when enflurane was inappropriately indicated by a clinical mass spectrometer that identified enflurane at mass to charge ratio = 69. In vitro, isoflurane, enflurane, or desflurane in oxygen was passed through dried carbon dioxide absorbents at 35, 45, and 55 degrees C. Gases were analyzed by gas chromatography and by mass spectrometry.

Results: Mass spectrometry identified several clinical incidents in which 30-410 ppm carbon monoxide was measured in respiratory gas. Trifluoromethane was produced during in vitro breakdown of isoflurane or desflurane. Although these inappropriately indicated quantities of "enflurane" correlated (r2 > 0.95) to carbon monoxide concentrations under a variety of conditions, this ratio varied with temperature, anesthetic agent, absorbent type, and water content.  相似文献   


13.
Background: Carbon monoxide forms via reaction of isoflurane, enflurane, and desflurane with dried CO2 absorbents. The authors hypothesize that interventions by nonphysician support personnel to decrease absorbent drying will decrease the exposure rate of patients to carbon monoxide from anesthetic breakdown.

Methods: In the control group, all anesthetizing personnel were made aware of the factors enabling CO generation from anesthetic breakdown, and prevention techniques were left to the anesthetizing personnel. After data collection was complete, the following interventions were initiated to reduce absorbent drying: Anesthesia technicians and housekeeping personnel were instructed to turn off all anesthesia machines after the last case of the day in each room, and the CO2 absorbent was changed each morning if fresh gas was found flowing. Baralyme[registered sign] was used in all phases of this study.

Results: Five cases of intraoperative carbon monoxide exposure occurred among 1,085 (0.46%) first cases in the control group. Postintervention, patient carbon monoxide exposures decreased (P <0.05), with one exposure among 1,961 (0.051%) first cases in the main operating room. Two exposures among 68 (2.9%) first cases occurred in remote locations (P < 0.001) versus main operating room. Predisposing factors for absorbent drying include the prolonged use of anesthesia machines for monitored anesthesia care, inappropriate drying techniques for expiratory flowmeters, understaffing of support personnel, and anesthesia in remote locations.  相似文献   


14.
Background: Potent inhaled anesthetics degrade in the presence of the strong bases (sodium hydroxide or potassium hydroxide) in carbon dioxide (CO2) absorbents. A new absorbent, Amsorb (Armstrong Medical Ltd., Coleraine, Northern Ireland), does not employ these strong bases. This study compared the scavenging efficacy and compound A production of two commercially available absorbents (soda lime and barium hydroxide lime) with Amsorb in humans undergoing general anesthesia.

Methods: Four healthy volunteers were anesthetized on different days with desflurane, sevoflurane, enflurane, and isoflurane. End-tidal carbon dioxide (ETco2) and anesthetic concentrations were measured with infrared spectroscopy; blood pressure and arterial blood gases were obtained from a radial artery catheter. Each anesthetic exposure lasted 3 h, during which the three fresh (normally hydrated) CO2 absorbents were used for a period of 1 h each. Anesthesia was administered with a fresh gas flow rate of 2 l/min of air:oxygen (50:50). Tidal volume was 10 ml/kg; respiratory rate was 8 breaths/min. Arterial blood gases were obtained at baseline and after each hour. Inspired concentrations of compound A were measured after 15, 30, and 60 min of anesthetic administration for each CO2 absorbent.

Results: Arterial blood gases and ETco2 were not different among three CO2 absorbents. During sevoflurane, compound A formed with barium hydroxide lime and soda lime, but not with Amsorb.  相似文献   


15.
Concern persists regarding the production of carbon monoxide (CO) and Compound A from the action of carbon dioxide (CO(2)) absorbents on desflurane and sevoflurane, respectively. We tested the capacity of eight different absorbents with various base compositions to produce CO and Compound A. We delivered desflurane through desiccated absorbents, and sevoflurane through desiccated and moist absorbents, then measured the resulting concentrations of CO from the former and Compound A from the latter. We also tested the CO(2) absorbing capacity of each absorbent by using a model anesthetic system. We found that the presence of potassium hydroxide (KOH) and sodium hydroxide (NaOH) increased the production of CO from calcium hydroxide (Ca[OH](2)) but did not consistently affect production of Compound A. However, the effect of KOH versus NaOH was not consistent in its impact on CO production. Furthermore, the effect of KOH versus NaOH versus Ca(OH)(2) was inconsistent in its impact on Compound A production. Two absorbents (Amsorb) [Armstrong Medica, Ltd, Coleraine, Northern Ireland], composed of Ca(OH)(2) plus 0.7% polyvinylpyrrolidine, calcium chloride, and calcium sulfate; and lithium hydroxide) produced dramatically lower concentrations of both CO and Compound A. Both produced minimal to no CO and only small concentrations of Compound A. The presence of polyvinylpyrrolidine, calcium chloride, and calcium sulfate in Amsorb appears to have suppressed the production of toxic products. All absorbents had an adequate CO(2) absorbing capacity greatest with lithium hydroxide. Implications: Production of the toxic substances, carbon monoxide and Compound A, from anesthetic degradation by carbon dioxide absorbents, might be minimized by the use of one of two specific absorbents, Amsorb (Armstrong Medica, Ltd., Coleraine, Northern Ireland) (calcium hydroxide which also includes 0.7% polyvinylpyrrolidine, calcium chloride, and calcium sulfate) or lithium hydroxide.  相似文献   

16.
Laster M  Roth P  Eger EI 《Anesthesia and analgesia》2004,99(3):769-74, table of contents
Rarely, fire and patient injury have resulted from the degradation of sevoflurane by desiccated carbon dioxide absorbent. Desiccated absorbent also can degrade desflurane and isoflurane, and in the present investigation we sought to determine whether a danger of fire also arose with their use in the presence of desiccated absorbent. Baralyme was desiccated by heating and directing a 10 L/min flow of oxygen through the absorbent. Approximately 1200 g of this desiccated absorbent was used to fill a standard absorber placed in a standard anesthetic circuit to which we directed a 6 L/min flow of oxygen containing 1.5 or 3.0 MAC desflurane, isoflurane, or sevoflurane. A 3-L reservoir bag served as a surrogate lung, and we ventilated this lung with a minute ventilation of 10 L/min. With desflurane or isoflurane, at both 1.5 MAC and 3.0 MAC, temperatures increased in 30 to 70 min to a peak of approximately 100 degrees C and then decreased. With 1.5 MAC sevoflurane (3.0 MAC was not studied), temperatures increased to over 200 degrees C, and in 2 of 5 studies, flames appeared in the anesthetic circuit. In a separate study, we found that concurrent delivery of carbon dioxide and desflurane did not increase peak temperatures. We conclude that the interaction of desflurane or isoflurane with desiccated absorbent is not likely to produce the conflagrations possible with sevoflurane.  相似文献   

17.
Knolle E  Linert W  Gilly H 《Anesthesiology》2002,97(2):454-459
BACKGROUND: Because Amsorb changes color when it dries, the authors investigated whether Amsorb combined with different strong base-containing carbon dioxide absorbents signals dehydration of such absorbents. METHODS: Five different carbon dioxide absorbents (1,330 g) each topped with 70 g of Amsorb were dried in an anesthesia machine (Modulus CD, Datex-Ohmeda, Madison, WI) with oxygen (Amsorb layer at the fresh gas inflow site). As soon as a color change was detected in the Amsorb, the authors tested the samples for a change in weight and carbon monoxide formation from 7.5% desflurane or 4% isoflurane. In a different experiment with the five absorbents, Amsorb was layered at the drying gas outflow site. In further experiments, the authors tested for a color change in Amsorb from drying and rehydrating and from drying with nitrogen. Finally, they dried a mixture of Amsorb and 1% NaOH and examined it for color change. RESULTS: In the experiments with Amsorb layered at the inflow, the Amsorb changed color when the water content of the samples was only marginally reduced (to a mean 13.6%), and no carbon monoxide formed. With Amsorb layered at the outflow, it changed color when the mean water content of the samples was reduced to 8.8%, and carbon monoxide formation was detected to varying degrees. The color change was independent of the drying gas and could be reversed by rehydrating. Adding NaOH to Amsorb prevented a color change. CONCLUSIONS: Dehydration in strong base-containing absorbents can reliably be indicated before carbon monoxide is formed when Amsorb is layered at the fresh gas inflow. The authors assume that the indicator dye in Amsorb changes color on drying because of the absence of strong base in this absorbent.  相似文献   

18.
Laster MJ  Eger EI 《Anesthesia and analgesia》2005,101(3):753-7, table of contents
Rarely, fire and patient injury result from the degradation of sevoflurane by desiccated Baralyme. The present investigation sought to determine whether high temperatures also arose with sevoflurane use in the presence of desiccated soda lime. We desiccated soda lime by directing a 10 L/min flow of oxygen through fresh absorbent. Using 1140 +/- 30 g (mean +/- sd) of this desiccated absorbent, we filled a single standard absorber canister placed in a standard anesthetic circuit to which we directed a 6 L/min flow of oxygen containing 1.5 minimum alveolar concentration (MAC) desflurane or sevoflurane, or 3.0 MAC desflurane, isoflurane, or sevoflurane (with and without concurrent delivery of 200 mL/min carbon dioxide). In an additional test, 2 canisters (rather than a single canister) containing desiccated absorbent were used and 3.0 MAC sevoflurane was applied. A 3-L reservoir bag served as a surrogate lung, and we ventilated this lung with a minute ventilation of 10 L/min. With desflurane at 1.5 MAC or 3.0 MAC or isoflurane at 3.0 MAC temperatures increased in 20 to 40 min to a peak of 30 degrees C to 45 degrees C and then declined. With 1.5 or 3.0 MAC sevoflurane, temperatures increased to approximately 90 degrees C, after which temperatures declined. Concurrent delivery of carbon dioxide and sevoflurane did not increase the peak temperatures reached. The use of 2 canisters increased the duration but not the peak of increased temperature reached with 3.0 MAC sevoflurane. No fires resulted from degradation of any anesthetic.  相似文献   

19.
In the presence of completely dry soda lime volatile anaesthetics will decompose to carbon monoxide (CO). In an in vitro study, the absorbent (soda lime, ICI) was dried with a constant gas flow of 1?l/min oxygen for 120?h. The weight loss during the drying was 17.1%. Two vol% of halothane, enflurane or isoflurane in oxygen was administered with a constant flow of 0.5?l/min oxygen through the completely dry absorbent. Concentrations of gases were measured before and after the absorbent using mass spectrometry (MGA 1100, Perkin-Elmer) and an electrochemical NO monitor (Mini PAC CO, Dräger). The temperature inside the soda lime was monitored continuously. Shortly after adding the anaesthetic to the oxygen passing through the absorbent, carbon monoxide appeared in the outlet of the soda lime container. The measured peak concentrations varied around 450?ppm (halothane), 3500 ppm (enflurane) and 3800?ppm (isoflurane).The temperature inside the absorbent rose from the ambient temperature (19.8?°C) to a maximum of 52.1?°C during CO production and decreased when the CO production lowered after approximately 1?h (all anaesthetics). During CO production no measurable concentration of halothane left the absorber. After passing through the absorbent the concentrations of isoflurane and enflurane were slightly lower than the corresponding concentrations in the fresh gas measured before absorption.  相似文献   

20.
Normal (hydrated) soda lime absorbent (approximately 95% calcium hydroxide [Ca(OH)2], the remaining 5% consisting of a mixture of sodium hydroxide [NaOH] and potassium hydroxide [KOH]) degrades sevoflurane to the nephrotoxin Compound A, and desiccated soda lime degrades desflurane, enflurane, and isoflurane to carbon monoxide (CO). We examined whether the bases in soda lime differed in their capacities to contribute to the production of these toxic substances by degradation of the inhaled anesthetics. Our results indicate that NaOH and KOH are the primary determinants of degradation of desflurane to CO and modestly augment production of Compound A from sevoflurane. Elimination of these bases decreases CO production 10-fold and decreases average inspired Compound A by up to 41%. These salutary effects can be achieved with only slight decreases in the capacity of the remaining Ca(OH)2 to absorb carbon dioxide. IMPLICATIONS: The soda lime bases used to absorb carbon dioxide from anesthetic circuits can degrade inhaled anesthetics to compounds such as carbon monoxide and the nephrotoxin, Compound A. Elimination of the bases sodium hydroxide and potassium hydroxide decreases production of these noxious compounds without materially decreasing the capacity of the remaining base, Ca(OH)2, to absorb carbon dioxide.  相似文献   

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