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1.
Debaene B  Plaud B  Dilly MP  Donati F 《Anesthesiology》2003,98(5):1042-1048
BACKGROUND: Residual neuromuscular blockade remains a problem even after short surgical procedures. The train-of-four (TOF) ratio at the adductor pollicis required to avoid residual paralysis is now considered to be at least 0.9. The incidence of residual paralysis using this new threshold is not known, especially after a single intubating dose of intermediate-duration nondepolarizing relaxant. Therefore, the aim of the study was to determine the incidence of residual paralysis in the postanesthesia care unit after a single intubating dose of twice the ED(95) of a nondepolarizing muscle relaxant with an intermediate duration of action. METHODS: Five hundred twenty-six patients were enrolled. They received a single dose of vecuronium, rocuronium, or atracurium to facilitate tracheal intubation and received no more relaxant thereafter. Neuromuscular blockade was not reversed at the end of the procedure. On arrival in the postanesthesia care unit, the TOF ratio was measured at the adductor pollicis, using acceleromyography. Head lift, tongue depressor test, and manual assessment of TOF and DBS fade were also performed. The time delay between the injection of muscle relaxant and quantitative measurement of neuromuscular blockade was calculated from computerized anesthetic records. RESULTS: The TOF ratios less than 0.7 and 0.9 were observed in 16% and 45% of the patients, respectively. Two hundred thirty-nine patients were tested 2 h or more after the administration of the muscle relaxant. Ten percent of these patients had a TOF ratio less than 0.7, and 37% had a TOF ratio less than 0.9. Clinical tests (head lift and tongue depressor) and manual assessment of fade showed a poor sensitivity (11-14%) to detect residual blockade (TOF < 0.9). CONCLUSION: After a single dose of intermediate-duration muscle relaxant and no reversal, residual paralysis is common, even more than 2 h after the administration of muscle relaxant. Quantitative measurement of neuromuscular transmission is the only recommended method to diagnose residual block.  相似文献   

2.
The authors sought to determine whether prior administration of a small, subparalyzing dose of nondepolarizing muscle relaxant would shorten the onset time of an intubating dose of muscle relaxant. Initially, in 60 anesthetized patients, twitch response of adductor pollicis to ulnar nerve stimulation was studied after a small dose of pancuronium 0.015 mg . kg-1, metocurine 0.03 mg . kg-1, or d-tubocurarine 0.04 mg . kg-1, followed 3 min later by pancuronium 0.08 mg . kg-1 or atracurium 0.4 mg . kg-1 administered iv. After 60 s, the minimum neuromuscular block, in all patients was 79.0 +/- 5.0%. A 95% depression or twitch tension occurred between 59.1 +/- 5.3 and 86.1 +/- 5.9 s. In another 60 patients, intubating conditions under similar regimen were studied, except the small dose of muscle relaxant was given immediately prior to induction of anesthesia. At the end of 60 s, good to excellent intubating conditions were present in 100% of the patients following the second dose of pancuronium and in 83% of the patients following atracurium. In 17% of the patients, after atracurium intubating conditions were fair. When nondepolarizing neuromuscular blocking drugs are administered in divided doses, neuromuscular blockade adequate for endotracheal intubation is achieved in less than 90 s. This facilitates rapid endotracheal intubation in a time comparable to using succinylcholine, without undesirable effects of the depolarizing neuromuscular blocking drugs.  相似文献   

3.
Residual paralysis at the time of tracheal extubation   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
Respiratory and pharyngeal muscle function are impaired during minimal neuromuscular blockade. Tracheal extubation in the presence of residual paresis may contribute to adverse respiratory events. In this investigation, we assessed the incidence and severity of residual neuromuscular block at the time of tracheal extubation. One-hundred-twenty patients presenting for gynecologic or general surgical procedures were enrolled. Neuromuscular blockade was maintained with rocuronium (visual train-of-four [TOF] count of 2) and all subjects were reversed with neostigmine at a TOF count of 2-4. TOF ratios were quantified using acceleromyography immediately before tracheal extubation, after clinicians had determined that complete neuromuscular recovery had occurred using standard clinical criteria (5-s head lift or hand grip, eye opening on command, acceptable negative inspiratory force or vital capacity breath values) and peripheral nerve stimulation (no evidence of fade with TOF or tetanic stimulation). TOF ratios were measured again on arrival to the postanesthesia care unit. Immediately before tracheal extubation, the mean TOF ratio was 0.67 +/- 0.2; among the 120 patients, 70 (58%) had a TOF ratio <0.7 and 105 (88%) had a TOF ratio <0.9. Significantly fewer patients had TOF ratios <0.7 (9 subjects, 8%) and <0.9 (38 subjects, 32%) in the postanesthesia care unit compared with the operating room (P < 0.001). Our results suggest that complete recovery from neuromuscular blockade is rarely present at the time of tracheal extubation.  相似文献   

4.
The residual effects of neuromuscular blocking agents may persist into the early postoperative recovery period, even when neuromuscular blockade is carefully monitored and reversed in the operating room. Recent data suggest that mild degrees of residual paresis (train-of-four TOF ratios of 0.7-0.9) may be associated with significant impairment of respiratory and pharyngeal muscle function. Therefore, the new gold standard reflecting acceptable neuromuscular recovery is a TOF ratio > or =0.9. Several investigations have demonstrated that many patients continue to arrive in the postanesthesia care unit with TOF ratios <0.7-0.9. Several techniques may be used to reduce the risk of postoperative residual paresis, which include avoidance of long-acting muscle relaxants, use of neuromuscular monitoring in the operating room, routine reversal of neuromuscular blockade at a TOF count of 2-3, and early administration of reversal agents. Careful management of neuromuscular blockade may limit the occurrence of adverse events associated with residual postoperative paralysis. Large-scale outcome studies are needed to clearly define the impact of residual neuromuscular block on major morbidity and mortality in surgical patients.  相似文献   

5.
Double-burst stimulation (DBS), a new technique to evaluate neuromuscular function, consists of two 50-Hz trains of 60-ms duration and 750 ms apart. DBS was compared with train-of-four (TOF) stimulation in 21 children aged 3-10 yr, during halothane anesthesia. On one arm the ulnar nerve was stimulated supramaximally with TOF stimulation every 12 s and the force of the evoked contraction of the adductor pollicis measured with an FTO3 force transducer and recorded on paper. Atracurium (0.4-0.5 mg.kg-1) was administered. During recovery from neuromuscular blockade, TOF stimulation was interrupted periodically and DBS substituted. The same stimulation patterns were applied to the ulnar nerve of the other arm simultaneously, and the clinical anesthesiologist was asked to estimate the degree of fade with both. There was good correlation between the measured TOF ratio (ratio of fourth to first response) and DBS ratio (ratio of second to first response). The TOF and DBS ratios above which fade could no longer be appreciated manually were (mean +/- SEM) 0.44 +/- 0.03 and 0.67 +/- 0.04 (P = 0.0002). Corresponding ranges were 0.3-0.8 for TOF and 0.4-0.9 for DBS, but DBS fade was always apparent if TOF fade could be detected. Therefore, in children, DBS is more sensitive than is TOF stimulation for the clinical assessment of recovery from neuromuscular blockade.  相似文献   

6.

Purpose

We report a case that involved immediate postoperative respiratory failure necessitating tracheal intubation, which was possibly related to recurarization after sugammadex reversal.

Clinical findings

A 54-yr-old woman weighing 115-kg was scheduled for laparoscopic repair of abdominal dehiscence under general anesthesia. Muscle relaxation was induced and maintained with rocuronium (170 mg iv total dose). At the end of the 170-min procedure, two twitches were visualized after supramaximal train-of-four (TOF) stimulation at the adductor pollicis muscle, and the patient’s central core temperature was 35.6°C. Sugammadex 200 mg iv (1.74 mg·kg?1) was administered. With the patient fully awake, a TOF ratio 0.9 was obtained five minutes later. The tracheal tube was then removed, and the patient was transferred to the postanesthesia care unit. Ten minutes later, the patient presented respiratory failure necessitating tracheal intubation and sedation with propofol. One TOF response only was visualized at the adductor pollicis muscle. Another dose of sugammadex 200 mg iv was administered. Forty-five minutes later, the patient was fully awake and her trachea was extubated after repeated measures of the TOF ratio (≥ 0.9) at the adductor pollicis muscle. The patient fully recovered without sequelae, further complication, or prolonged hospital stay.

Conclusion

Shortly after tracheal extubation, an obese patient experienced respiratory failure necessitating tracheal intubation and an additional dose of sugammadex. This occurred despite initial reversal of neuromuscular blockade with an appropriate dose of sugammadex 2 mg·kg?1 iv given at two responses to TOF stimulation.  相似文献   

7.
Background: Functional characteristics of the pharynx and upper esophagus, including aspiration episodes, were investigated in 14 awake volunteers during various levels of partial neuromuscular block. Pharyngeal function was evaluated using videoradiography and computerized pharyngeal manometry during contrast bolus swallowing.

Methods: Measurements of pharyngeal constrictor muscle function (contraction amplitude, duration, and slope), upper esophageal sphincter muscle resting tone, muscle coordination, bolus transit time, and aspiration under fluoroscopic control (laryngeal or tracheal penetration) were made before (control measurements) and during a vecuronium-induced partial neuromuscular paralysis, at fixed intervals of mechanical adductor pollicis muscle train-of-four (TOF) fade; that is, at TOF ratios of 0.60, 0.70, 0.80, and after recovery to a TOF ratio > 0.90.

Results: Six volunteers aspirated (laryngeal penetration) at a TOF ratio < 0.90. None of them aspirated at a TOF ratio > 0.90 or during control recording. Pharyngeal constrictor muscle function was not affected at any level of paralysis. The upper esophageal sphincter resting tone was significantly reduced at TOF ratios of 0.60, 0.70, and 0.80 (P < 0.05). This was associated with reduced muscle coordination and shortened bolus transit time at a TOF ratio of 0.60.  相似文献   


8.
The effect of muscle relaxants varies among people and the extent, the duration and recovery from the neuromuscular block varies. Clinical tests cannot determine the effect of muscle relaxants which is only possible with neuromuscular monitoring. The relaxometry procedure measures the muscular response to electrical stimulation of the corresponding motor nerve and the adductor pollicis muscle is mostly used; however, this muscle is not representative for other muscle groups, such as the muscles of the larynx and diaphragm. The muscles of the larynx and diaphragm are more resistant against nondepolarizing muscle relaxants than the adductor pollicis muscle. The train of four (TOF) is used at the beginning of surgery for monitoring of the optimal time for tracheal intubation; moreover, the TOF is used during surgery for monitoring of the muscle blockade and at the end of surgery for monitoring recovery. Monitoring of deep muscular blockades, however, is only possible with the posttetanic count (PTC) when there are no TOF counts. The PTC allows repetition and higher doses of muscle relaxants during abdominal surgery; therefore, conditions for surgery are optimal and cumulation of muscle relaxants is avoided.  相似文献   

9.
Residual neuromuscular blockade can be evaluated using acceleromyography, tactile assessment of train-of-four (TOF), double-burst stimulation (DBS), 50-Hz tetanus, or 100-Hz tetanus. Nerve stimulation can be at the hand or the wrist. We compared all these tests at both sites of stimulation. Rocuronium was given to 32 patients under sevoflurane anesthesia. The mechanomyographic adductor pollicis TOF ratio was measured at one extremity. In the other, stimulation was at the hand or the wrist, by random allocation, and the acceleromyographic TOF ratio was measured. During recovery, a blinded observer estimated tactile fade. The TOF fade became undetectable when mechanomyographic TOF ratio was (mean +/- sd) 0.31 +/- 0.15. For DBS, this threshold was 0.76 +/- 0.11. For 50-Hz tetanus, it was 0.31 +/- 0.15. For 100-Hz tetanus, it was 0.88 +/- 0.18, with a range of 0.14-1.00. These tactile responses were the same for hand and wrist stimulation. When acceleromyographic TOF ratio reached 1.0, the mechanomyographic TOF ratio was 0.89 +/- 0.06. With stimulation in the hand, acceleromyographic TOF ratio >1.0 was less frequent than at the wrist. To exclude residual paralysis, TOF, DBS, and 50-Hz tetanus are inadequate, 100-Hz tetanus is unreliable, and acceleromyography performs best.  相似文献   

10.
BACKGROUND: Acceleromyography is regularly used as an isolated test to detect residual paralysis. The performance of acceleromyography, however, has not been investigated for the setting where calibration is impossible. This study first evaluated the reliability of a single acceleromyographic train-of-four (TOF) ratio (T4/T1) to detect residual paralysis and compared it with tactile estimation of fade after double-burst stimulation and 100-Hz, 5-s tetanus. The second part of the study investigated whether uncalibrated acceleromyographic TOF ratio can predict time to complete recovery. METHODS: Anesthesia was induced and maintained with propofol and sufentanil. In the first part of the study (n = 40) neuromuscular blockade was assessed by mechanomyography. After signal stabilization 0.15 mg/kg cisatracurium was given. At the end of surgery a first physician evaluated manual fade after double-burst stimulation, then, in the same patient, a single acceleromyographic TOF ratio was recorded; thereafter a second physician, unaware of the results, assessed fade after a 100-Hz, 5-s tetanus. Sensitivity, specificity, and negative and positive predictive value of the three tests to detect a mechanomyographic TOF > or =0.9 were calculated. In the second part of the study (n = 25) neuromuscular recovery was assessed simultaneously with mechanomyography and uncalibrated acceleromyography (current set manually at 60 mA); the time intervals from acceleromyographic TOF ratios of 0.6, 0.7, 0.8, and 0.9 until complete recovery, i.e., adductor pollicis mechanomyography 0.9 TOF ratios, were determined. RESULTS: The sensitivity of double burst stimulation was 29% (95% confidence interval [CI], 13-45%), its specificity was 100%, the negative predictive value was 29% (95% CI, 13-45%), and the positive predictive value was 100%. For a single acceleromyographic TOF ratio the respective values were 70% (95% CI, 54-86%), 88% (95% CI, 67-100%), 47% (95% CI, 23-71%) and 95% (95% CI, 86-100%). The respective values for 100-Hz, 5-s tetanus were 74% (95% CI, 59-89%), 55% (95% CI, 23-88%), 38% (95% CI, 12-64%), and 85% (95% CI, 72 -99%). At an uncalibrated acceleromyographic TOF ratio was 0.6, complete recovery occurred within 16 min (95% CI, 13.5-17.8 min). At acceleromyographic TOF ratios of 0.7, 0.8, and 0.9 this time interval was 12.5 min (95% CI, 10.2-14.8 min), 8 min (95% CI, 6.1-9.9 min), and 4 min (95% CI, 2.7-5.8 min), respectively. CONCLUSIONS: Acceleromyographic TOF performed better than double-burst stimulation or 100 Hz tetanus, but it did not reliably detect low degrees of residual paralysis when used as an isolated test at the end of surgery. The uncalibrated acceleromyographic TOF ratio, however, did predict the time to complete recovery.  相似文献   

11.
Rocuronium is a new nondepolarizing muscle relaxant for which a fast onset has been described. The goal of this study was to examine whether the characteristics of rocuronium could make it an appropriate relaxant for the anaesthetic management of operations of intermediate duration such as endoscopic upper airway surgery. These operations, which require the anaesthesiologist and surgeon to ”share” the patient’s airway, require good muscle relaxation for endotracheal intubation and placement of endoscopic instruments. In addition, the time course of neuromuscular blockade and its relation to the quality of intubating conditions were analysed. Methods: The study was approved by the local ethics committee; 30 patients (ASA status 1–3) scheduled for elective endoscopic upper airway surgery were included after written informed consent. Exclusion criteria were suspected difficult intubating conditions, neuromuscular disease, or antibiotic therapy with aminoglycosides during the last 24?h. Anaesthesia was induced by propofol 2?mg/kg and alfentanil 1?mg after volume loading with 500?ml Ringer’s lactate and preoxygenation, and was maintained by propofol infusion 5–8?mg/kg/h and repetitive alfentanil injections according to clinical needs. Endotracheal intubation was performed by a senior anaesthesiologist 90?s after injection of rocuronium 0.6?mg/kg (2×ED95). Intubating conditions were graded 1 to 4 (1=excellent, 2=good, 3=sufficient, 4=inadequate). Acceleromyography was used for neuromuscular monitoring by means of the TOF-guard (Organon Teknika/Biometer). The adduction movement of the thumb was measured by an acceleration transducer while stimulating the ulnar nerve at the wrist via surface electrodes in a supramaximal train-of-four (TOF) mode (2?Hz every 15?s). Twitch height and TOF ratio were documented during the course of neuromuscular blockade. Data are presented as mean±standard deviation. Results: Patients were aged 37 to 64 years (mean 54±7). Intubating conditions were excellent in 17 cases and good in 7. In 2 cases intubating conditions were graded sufficient, as patients could be easily intubated but showed clear diaphragmatic movements at intubation. In 4 patients intubating conditions could not be judged, as a laryngoscopic view of the glottic structures was impossible for anatomic reasons. Neuromuscular block at intubation was 78±22%, onset time 152±62?s, clinical duration 30±8?min, and recovery index 11±4?min. The TOF ratio required 51±14?min to return to 0.7. Conclusions: Good to excellent intubating conditions can be expected 90?s after injection of rocuronium 0.6?mg/kg. Diaphragmatic reactions cannot be excluded. Complete relaxation of the adductor pollicis muscle is not necessary for endotracheal intubation. Intubation at a certain time interval, for example, 90?s after injection of rocuronium 0.6?mg/kg, can be recommended. Onset and recovery characteristics of rocuronium make it an appropriate relaxant for the anaesthetic management of operations of intermediate duration such as endoscopic upper airway surgery. Care should be given, however, to detect inadequate recovery of neuromuscular transmission, as there are considerable interindividual differences in recovery.  相似文献   

12.

Purpose

Over the past three decades, many studies have shown a high proportion of patients in the recovery room with residual neuromuscular blockade after anesthesia. The purpose of this Continuing Professional Development module is to present the physiological consequences of residual paralysis, estimate the extent of the problem, and suggest solutions to prevent its occurrence.

Principal findings

Residual paralysis is defined as a train-of-four ratio (TOFR) < 0.9 at the adductor pollicis. While tidal volume and, to a lesser extent, vital capacity are well preserved as the intensity of blockade increases, the probability of airway obstruction, impaired swallowing, and pulmonary aspiration increases markedly as TOFR decreases. In recent studies, incidences of residual paralysis from 4-57% have been reported, but surveys indicate that anesthesiologists estimate the incidence of the problem at 1% or less. The decision to administer neostigmine or sugammadex should be based on the degree of spontaneous recovery at the adductor pollicis muscle (thumb), not on recovery at the corrugator supercilii (eyebrow). The most important drawback of neostigmine is its inability to reverse profound blockade, which is a consequence of its ceiling effect. When spontaneous recovery reaches the point where TOFR > 0.4 or four equal twitch responses are seen, reduced doses of neostigmine may be given. The dose of sugammadex required in a given situation depends on the intensity of blockade.

Conclusion

Careful monitoring and delaying the administration of neostigmine until four twitches are observed at the adductor pollicis can decrease the incidence of residual paralysis. The clinical and pharmacoeconomic effects of unrestricted sugammadex use are unknown at this time.  相似文献   

13.
Background: Residual paralysis of suprahyoid muscles may occur when the adductor pollicis response has completely recovered after the administration of a neuromuscular blocking agent. The response of the geniohyoid muscle to intubating doses of muscle relaxants is evaluated and compared to that of adductor pollicis.

Methods: Sixteen patients undergoing elective surgery under general anesthesia were given 5-7 mg *symbol* kg sup -1 thiopental and 2 micro gram *symbol* kg sup -1 fentanyl intravenously for induction of anesthesia. Eight (half) patients then received 0.5 mg *symbol* kg sup -1 atracurium, and the other eight received 0.1 mg *symbol* kg sup -1 vecuronium. The evoked response (twitch height, TH) of the adductor pollicis was monitored by measuring the integrated electromyographic response (AP EMG) on one limb and the mechanical response, using a force transducer (AP force), on the other. The activity of geniohyoid muscle (GH EMG) was measured using submental percutaneous electrodes. The following variables were measured: maximal TH depression; onset time for neuromuscular blockade to 50%, 90%, and maximal TH depression (OT50, OT90, and OTmax); times between administration of neuromuscular blocking agent and TH recovery to 10%, 25%, 50%, 75%, and 90% of control; and time for return of train-of-four ratio to return to 0.7.

Results: The principal findings were (1) OTmax was significantly (P < 0.01) shorter for geniohyoid than for adductor pollicis after either atracurium or vecuronium (OTmax was 216, 256, and 175 s for AP force, AP EMG, and GH EMG, with atracurium and 181, 199, and 144 s with vecuronium, respectively), and (2) the evoked EMG of geniohyoid recovered at the same speed as the EMG of adductor pollicis after an intubating dose of atracurium or vecuronium (recovery of TH to 75% of control at 50, 48, 42 min with AP force, AP EMG, and GH EMG with atracurium and 46, 45, and 42 min with vecuronium, respectively).  相似文献   


14.
The effectiveness of neostigmine 40 μg/kg for antagonism of two different levels of neuromuscular blockade, induced by a bolus dose of mivacurium 0.15 mg/kg, was studied in 45 patients. The patients were anaesthetized with thiopentone, fentanyl, nitrous oxide in oxygen, and enflurane. Neostigmine was administered at either 10% recovery of the twitch height (TH10) at the adductor pollicis muscle ( n =14) or upon reappearance of the first response at the orbicularis oculi muscle (OO1) after train-of-four (TOF) stimulation ( n = 16), the latter representing a deeper degree of neuromuscular blockade. Fifteen of the 45 patients did not receive neostigmine (control group). Neostigmine administration at OO1 rather than at TH10 at the adductor pollicis muscle caused reversal of neuromuscular blockade to occur 8 min earlier and shortened the time to reach 25% recovery of the twitch height (TH25) at the adductor pollicis muscle by about 5 min, compared with the control group. However, the time needed to reach a T4/T1 ratio ≥0.8 was similar in both the early and late neostigmine administration groups, being 9 min faster than in the control group. It can be concluded that there is no advantage in administering neostigmine at profound neuromuscular blockade to achieve clinically adequate recovery (T4/T1 ratio ≥0.8). However, the time between injection of mivacurium and TH25 may be shortened by using neostigmine at profound neuromuscular blockade, a procedure which may be useful in case of unpredictably difficult intubation, since diaphragmatic movements usually reappear at TH25.  相似文献   

15.
BACKGROUND: Residual neuromuscular blockade may increase the risk of development of post-operative pulmonary complications, but is difficult to detect clinically. It was speculated that patients may have impaired neuromuscular transmission after surgery of long duration, despite the recovery of the train-of-four (TOF) ratio. METHODS: The muscle force (mechanomyography), motor compound muscle action potential amplitude and fatigue of the adductor pollicis (AP) muscle were assessed after recovery of the TOF ratio to 0.9. Thirteen patients receiving repetitive administration of neuromuscular blocking agents (NMBAs) during surgery (median, 5.3 h; interquartile range, 3.4-6 h) were studied post-operatively in the intensive care unit. At the time of the measurements, patients were scheduled for extubation and the AP TOF ratio amounted to a mean (standard deviation, SD) of 0.94 (0.05). Six healthy volunteers of similar age, weight and gender were studied for comparison. Force-frequency curves were generated by stimulation (10-80 Hz) of the ulnar nerve, and the AP electromyogram (EMG) amplitude was measured, in parallel, before and after evoked muscle fatigue. RESULTS: The maximum AP force at a stimulation frequency of 20-80 Hz was significantly lower in patients than in controls [40 N (16 N) vs. 65 N (18 N) at 80 Hz]. In patients, but not in controls, the EMG amplitude decreased with increasing nerve stimulation frequency, and a tetanic fade of both force and EMG, amounting to 0.41 (0.33) (EMG) and 0.61 (0.35) (mechanomyography) at 80 Hz, was observed. Force after fatiguing contractions did not differ between the groups. CONCLUSION: After repetitive administration of NMBAs during surgery, even with recovery of the TOF ratio to 0.9 or more, muscle weakness from impaired neuromuscular transmission can occur. The clinician should consider that post-operative recovery of the TOF ratio to 0.9 does not exclude an impairment of neuromuscular transmission.  相似文献   

16.
The intubating conditions and neuromuscular blocking profile following 600 micrograms.kg-1 rocuronium (Org 9426) have been investigated in patients under various experimental conditions. They were compared with conditions following 1.5 mg.kg-1 suxamethonium, preceded by a precurarising dose (10 mg) of gallamine, and with those in a control group in the absence of a muscle relaxant. Rocuronium produced good to excellent intubating conditions at 60 as well as at 90 s after administration, even though there was only a partial blockade of the adductor pollicis muscle. Intubating conditions following suxamethonium were comparable with those after rocuronium. Half of the control patients could be intubated. The clinical duration and the recovery time of 600 micrograms.kg-1 of rocuronium were 24(4) and 9(3) min (mean(s.d.)), respectively. Rocuronium may have a major advantage over existing non-depolarising muscle relaxants due to the early presence of excellent intubating conditions. The results indicate that rocuronium may replace suxamethonium in procedures in which rapid sequence induction is required.  相似文献   

17.
Double burst stimulation (DBS) is a new mode of stimulation developed to reveal residual neuromuscular blockade under clinical conditions. The stimulus consists of two short bursts of 50 Hz tetanic stimulation, separated by 750 ms, and the response to the stimulation is two short muscle contractions. Fade in the response results from neuromuscular blockade as with train-of-four stimulation (TOF). The authors compared the sensitivity of DBS and TOF in the detection of residual neuromuscular blockade during clinical anaesthesia. Fifty-two healthy patients undergoing surgery were studied. For both stimulation patterns the frequencies of manually detectable fade in the response to stimulation were determined and compared at various electromechanically measured TOF ratios. A total of 369 fade evaluations for DBS and TOF were performed. Fade frequencies were statistically significantly higher with DBS than with TOF, regardless of the TOF ratio level. Absence of fade with TOF implied a 48% chance of considerable residual relaxation as compared with 9% when fade was absent with DBS. The results demonstrate that DBS is more sensitive than TOF in the manual detection of residual neuromuscular blockade.  相似文献   

18.
Background: Acceleromyography is regularly used as an isolated test to detect residual paralysis. The performance of acceleromyography, however, has not been investigated for the setting where calibration is impossible. This study first evaluated the reliability of a single acceleromyographic train-of-four (TOF) ratio (T4/T1) to detect residual paralysis and compared it with tactile estimation of fade after double-burst stimulation and 100-Hz, 5-s tetanus. The second part of the study investigated whether uncalibrated acceleromyographic TOF ratio can predict time to complete recovery.

Methods: Anesthesia was induced and maintained with propofol and sufentanil. In the first part of the study (n = 40) neuromuscular blockade was assessed by mechanomyography. After signal stabilization 0.15 mg/kg cisatracurium was given. At the end of surgery a first physician evaluated manual fade after double-burst stimulation, then, in the same patient, a single acceleromyographic TOF ratio was recorded; thereafter a second physician, unaware of the results, assessed fade after a 100-Hz, 5-s tetanus. Sensitivity, specificity, and negative and positive predictive value of the three tests to detect a mechanomyographic TOF >=0.9 were calculated. In the second part of the study (n = 25) neuromuscular recovery was assessed simultaneously with mechanomyography and uncalibrated acceleromyography (current set manually at 60 mA); the time intervals from acceleromyographic TOF ratios of 0.6, 0.7, 0.8, and 0.9 until complete recovery, i.e., adductor pollicis mechanomyography 0.9 TOF ratios, were determined.

Results: The sensitivity of double burst stimulation was 29% (95% confidence interval [CI], 13-45%), its specificity was 100%, the negative predictive value was 29% (95% CI, 13-45%), and the positive predictive value was 100%. For a single acceleromyographic TOF ratio the respective values were 70% (95% CI, 54-86%), 88% (95% CI, 67-100%), 47% (95% CI, 23-71%) and 95% (95% CI, 86-100%). The respective values for 100-Hz, 5-s tetanus were 74% (95% CI, 59-89%), 55% (95% CI, 23-88%), 38% (95% CI, 12-64%), and 85% (95% CI, 72 -99%). At an uncalibrated acceleromyographic TOF ratio was 0.6, complete recovery occurred within 16 min (95% CI, 13.5-17.8 min). At acceleromyographic TOF ratios of 0.7, 0.8, and 0.9 this time interval was 12.5 min (95% CI, 10.2-14.8 min), 8 min (95% CI, 6.1-9.9 min), and 4 min (95% CI, 2.7-5.8 min), respectively.  相似文献   


19.
PURPOSE: To review recent findings concerning neuromuscular blockade and monitoring at the larynx, the diaphragm, and the corrugator supercilii muscle. SOURCE: This narrative review is based on recent publications. PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: Neuromuscular blockade at the larynx and the diaphragm is less intense than at the adductor pollicis muscle; the onset and offset of neuromuscular blockade is more rapid. The corrugator supercilii muscle reflects better the time course of neuromuscular blockade of the larynx than the adductor pollicis muscle, is better suited to monitor the onset of neuromuscular blockade for intubation, and should give a better reflection of the time course and degree of neuromuscular blockade of the larynx or the diaphragm. Recovery of neuromuscular function at the end of any procedure is best reflected at the adductor pollicis muscle where neuromuscular transmission is last restored. Clinical monitoring of the larynx or the diaphragm is still limited by the absence of a simple method. Acceleromyography of the corrugator supercilii muscle is prone to artifacts that do not occur during monitoring of the adductor pollicis muscle. Phonomyography, a new method of monitoring that is currently being tested, is based on the phenomenon that muscle contraction creates low-frequency sound waves, which can be detected using special microphones to quantify neuromuscular blockade. This method seems promising because it can be easily used on all muscles of interest. CONCLUSION: Research during the last 15 years has greatly enhanced our knowledge about how muscles react differently to muscle relaxants and has enabled us to achieve better surgical conditions with safer use of muscle relaxants. Interesting technologies have been developed to reliably monitor neuromuscular blockade at the larynx and the diaphragm, but are currently restricted to research settings. Our increased understanding should help us in ongoing efforts to develop the "ideal" muscle relaxant and the "ideal" method of neuromuscular monitoring.  相似文献   

20.
BACKGROUND: Residual paralysis increases the risk of pulmonary complications but is difficult to detect. To test the hypothesis that accelerometry predicts effects of residual paralysis on pulmonary and upper airway function, the authors related tests of pulmonary and pharyngeal function to accelerometry of adductor pollicis muscle in 12 partially paralyzed volunteers. METHODS: Rocuronium (0.01 mg/kg + 2-10 microg x kg-1 x min-1) was administered to maintain train-of-four (TOF) ratios (assessed every 15 s) of approximately 0.5 and 0.8 over a period of more than 5 min. The authors evaluated pharyngeal and facial muscle functions during steady state relaxation and performed spirometric measurements every 5 min until recovery. Upper airway obstruction was defined as a mean ratio of expiratory and inspiratory flow at 50% of vital capacity of greater than 1. The TOF ratio associated with "acceptable" pulmonary recovery (forced vital capacity and forced inspiratory volume in 1 s of > or =90% of baseline) was calculated using a linear regression model. RESULTS: At peak blockade (TOF ratio 0.5 +/- 0.16), forced inspiratory flow was impaired (53 +/- 19%) to a greater degree than forced expiratory flow (75 +/- 20%) with a mean ratio of expiratory and inspiratory flow at 50% of vital capacity of 1.18 +/- 0.6. Upper airway obstruction, observed in 8 of 12 volunteers, paralleled an impaired ability to swallow reported by 10 of 12 volunteers. In contrast, all volunteers except one could sustain a head lift for more than 5 s. The authors calculated that a mean TOF ratio of 0.56 (95% confidence interval, 0.22-0.71) predicts "acceptable" recovery of forced vital capacity, whereas forced inspiratory volume in 1 s was impaired until a TOF ratio of 0.95 (0.82-1.18) was reached. A 100% recovery of TOF ratio predicts an acceptable recovery of forced vital capacity, forced inspiratory volume in 1 s, and mean ratio of expiratory and inspiratory flow at 50% of vital capacity in 93%, 73%, and 88% of measurements (calculated negative predictive values), respectively. CONCLUSION: Impaired inspiratory flow and upper airway obstruction frequently occur during minimal neuromuscular blockade (TOF ratio 0.8), and extubation may put the patient at risk. Although a TOF ratio of unity predicts a high probability of adequate recovery from neuromuscular blockade, respiratory function can still be impaired.  相似文献   

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