Inhalational Anaesthetic

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Administration and Absorption of Drugs. Factors that effect the action of a drug 1.Rate of accumulation at its site of action 2.Concentration of the drug.
Advertisements

Respiration. How does respiration take place? There are two respiratory movements: Inspiration (inhalation) Expiration (exhalation) When you inhale, air.
General anesthetics Dr Sanjeewani Fonseka.
UPTAKE AND DISTRIBUTION OF INHALATIONAL ANAESTHETIC AGENTS
Respiratory System Breathing Mechanism: Respiratory Volumes and Capacity, Alveolar Ventilation, and Nonrespiratory Movements.
GENERAL ANAESTHESIA M. Attia SVUH Feb.2007.
Mosby items and derived items © 2007 by Mosby, Inc., an affiliate of Elsevier Inc. Chapter 12 General Anesthetics.
CHAPTER 3 ISOFLURANE AND SEVOFLURANE (HALOGENATED COMPOUNDS) NITROUS OXIDE AND DESFLURANE ENFLURANE HALOTHANE METHOXYFLURANE DIETHYL ETHER Inhalation Anesthetics.
Inhalation Anesthetics
Pharmacokinetics of Inhalation Anesthetics Dr.Doaa Kamal Department of Anesthesia, Ain Shams University adress:
ANATOMY & PHYSIOLOGY for NITROUS OXIDE
Dr. Rupak Bhattarai. INTRODUCTION  Nitrous oxide, Chloroform and Ether were the first universally accepted general anesthetics.  Ethyl chloride, Ethylene.
SOLUBILITY BY DR ABDUL JALIL ASSISTANT PROFESSOR DEPARTMENT OF ANAESTHESIA AND ICU LAHORE GENERAL HOSPITAL/PGMI LAHORE.
Without reference, identify principles about Anesthesia Units with at least 70 percent accuracy.
Methods of Drug Delivery
GENERAL ANESTHETICS Tutik Juniastuti.
Lu-Tai Tien, Ph.D. School of Medicine Fu-Jen Catholic University
General Anesthesia Dr. Israa.
ANESTHETICS Dr.Shadi- Sarahroodi Pharm.D & PhD PUBLISHED BY
By: Dr. safa bakr M.B.Ch.B. ,H.D.A. ,F.I.B.M S.
GENERAL ANAESTHESIA BY: DR.H.S.IMRAN-UL-HAQUE. LECTURER, PHARMACOLOGY & THERAPEUTICS
VNTE Prep Anesthetic Review.
General Anaesthesia By Zach Lafleur and Thomas Ehret.
General anesthesia General anesthesia is essential to surgical practice, because it renders patients analgesic, amnesia, and unconscious reflexes, while.
General anesthesia General anesthesia was not known until the mid-1800’s Diethylether was the first general anesthetic used for surgery General Anesthetics.
General anesthetics.
Pharmacology DH206 Chapter 10: General Anesthetics Lisa Mayo, RDH, BSDH Copyright © 2011, 2007 Mosby, Inc., an affiliate of Elsevier. All rights reserved.
2 3  Which influence the selection of the anesthetics are  Liver & kidney – target organs for toxic effects by the release of Fluoride, Bromide.
Inhaled anesthetics By: Israa Omar.
Dr. Laila M. Matalqah Ph.D. Pharmacology PHARMACOLOGY OF CNS 3 Anesthetics General Pharmacology M212.
Definition : Anesthesia (an =without, aisthesis = sensation ) Anesthesia is medication that attempts to eliminate pain impulse from reaching the brain.
Inhalational Anaesthesia
What is Anesthesia? Franklin Scamman, MD. Topics to Cover This Lecture 1.What is “anesthesia” 2.History and mechanism of anesthesia 3.Uptake and distribution.
General anaesthetics 22January2013 Batch17Year2 Pharmacology.
Dr.Arkan Jaafar , M.D. Anesthesiologist Medical college of Mosul
HINDU COLLEGE PG COURSE.
Med Chem Tutoring - Anesthesia
Gas Laws Jed Wolpaw MD, M.Ed Sept 2, 2015.
GENERAL ANAESTHETIC AGENTS By Afsar fathima.
Pharmacokinetics and Pharmacodynamics
Veterinary Anesthesia By Prof. Dr. Muneer S. Al-Badrany
The Physics of the Lungs and Breathing
Faisal I. Mohammed, MD, PhD
General Anesthetics Amber Johnson.
Anesthesia By Alaina Darby.
General Anesthesia.
Anesthesia By Alaina Darby.
General anesthesia General anesthesia is essential to surgical practice, because it renders patients analgesic, amnesia, and unconscious reflexes, while.
General Anesthesia.
Starter Quick Quiz!! What 2 ways does air enter the body?
Department of Surgery Anesthesiology Dr. Ahmed Haki Ismael
VOLATILE ANESTHETICS Nurcan Kızılcık YTUH Anesthesiology Dept.
School of Pharmacy, University of Nizwa
Nurcan Kızılcık Sancar YTUH Anesthesiology Dept.
Tom Archer, MD, MBA UCSD Anesthesia
UPTAKE & DISTRIBUTION OF INHALATIONAL AGENTS
Respiratory Physiology I
CNS Depressants Lab # 2.
Pharmacokinetics: Drug Absorption
General anesthesia General anesthesia is essential to surgical practice, because it renders patients analgesic, amnesia, and unconscious reflexes, while.
General anesthesia General anesthesia is essential to surgical practice, because it renders patients analgesic, amnesia, and unconscious reflexes, while.
Intravenous versus Inhalational Induction
Inhalation Anesthetics
Gas Transfer (Diffusion of O2 and CO2)
Intro to Neuromuscular blocking agents
Done By : Ola Fahmi Qasem
6.4 – Gas Exchange.
EXCHANGE SURFACES Lesson Objectives:
Inhalational anesthetics
General Anesthetics Michael G. Haske, Jr. MD
Presentation transcript:

Inhalational Anaesthetic Done by: Thaer Omar Alqatish

Anaesthesia is a Latin world Ane (without) , esthesia (sensation) = without sensation.

Goals of anaesthesia Analgesia Muscle relaxation Amnesia Loss of protective reflexes (coughing , hiccups, etc..) Make the patient unconscious Note: no single dx can do all these effectively and safely so in anaesthesia process we use multiple agent usually .

Anaesthesia selection Procedure being performed (appendectomy different than amputation) Patient factors Respiratory system Cardiovascular system Liver and kidney dysfunction Drugs & medications

Types of anaesthetic drugs For any dx to be general anaesthetics it needs to cross the BBB For it to cross the BBB it needs to lipid soluble And have small molecular weight

Stages of anaesthesia

Mechanism of action for general anaesthetics they are not clearly understood but here what we know about them: Macroscopic level At molecular level GABA receptors (good anaesthesia but weak analgesia) NMDA receptors (good analgesia but weak anaesthesia)

Lets start ….. Inhaled anaesthesia Inhaled agents usually are used to maintain anaesthesia after induction with IV agents , why ?? In children we usually induce anaesthesia by inhaled agents directly without iv agents.

How to measure the potency of Inhaled agent?? By MAC (minimum alveolar concentration) : it’s the percent of gas required in mixture to reach 50% of anaesthesia. Low MAC = high potency . Similar to ED50 but the inhaled version. Factors affecting MAC Patient related (elderly lower MAC) Drug related (more lipid soluble more potent ,so lower MAC)

Factors affecting function of inhalation anaesthetic agents: 3 Questions. Alveolar wash in :How fast anaesthetic gas reach the alveolus ? Respiratory rate Concentration of drug Anaesthetic uptake: How fast the anaesthetic agent pass to blood and act on the brain ? Gradient between air and blood( as dx concentration increase in blood it will be harder for gas to diffuse from alveoli to capillaries) Cardiac output Solubility in blood “more in next slide” Anaesthesia wash out: how much it takes for anaesthetic effect to finish ? Effects on different tissue (fat tissue can store more of drug than muscles so fatter people will stay in anaesthetic state for longer time) The more lipid soluble the drug is the more it stays in body .

Solubility of gas for blood determines speed of onset/offset . Examples to understand … Halothane more fat soluble so more potent (low MAC) But because it’s more blood soluble so it has a slower onset of action. N2O less fat soluble so less potent (high MAC) But because it’s also less soluble in blood it has faster on/off action. To sum up; Solubility of gas for blood determines speed of onset/offset . Solubility of gas for lipids determines potency .

Now lets talk about specific Inhalation agents We can divide them into two groups ; (there are more but for the sake of our lesson) Volatile halogenated hydrocarbon Chemical compounds ends with –ane (halothane, enflurane, etc..) Nitrous oxide (n2o) It’s not nitric oxide (NO) don’t mix things up

Nitrous Oxide Nitrous oxide (N2O; laughing gas) is colorless and essentially odourless gas. Low potent inhaled anaesthesia with high MAC of 105% Often used in dentistry offices. Good analgesia but weak anaesthesia because it acts on NMDA receptors. (NMDA antagonist)

Mechanism of action

Effects on Organ Systems Cardiovascular ; no marked changes. Respiratory ; depress respiratory system by increases respiratory rate (tachypnea) and decreases tidal volume. Cerebral ; increasing CBF and ICP. Neuromuscular ; In contrast to other inhalation agents, nitrous oxide does not provide significant muscle relaxation. Kidney and liver; decrease blood flow to kidney and liver but to a lesser extent than with the volatile agents.

Side Effects of N2O It’s safe drug has little toxic effect . No significant side effect other than post-op nausea and vomiting BUT in certain conditions there are more troubling side effects. (secondary gas effects and diffusion hypoxia) “more in next slide” N2O diffuses rapidly into air spaces and increase its volume , so in patients with pneumonia and abdominal distension ; the N2O will go into these closed cavity and will double its size .

Secondary gas effect (the N2O will be absorbed very quickly that it will lead increase concentration of other anaesthetic agent in alveoli)

Diffusion Hypoxia

Thank You