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General Anesthetics Michael G. Haske, Jr. MD
Assistant Professor of Anesthesiology Stritch School of Medicine Loyola University Medical Center Maywood, IL
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IV Agents History Pharmacokinetics
Why do more soluble anesthetics take longer to cause sleep? Why does an increase in cardiac output slow induction? IV Agents
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Anesthesia First sedative? Alcohol (Neolithic period?) vs. Analgesics
Opium – poppy (3400 B.C.) “Joy Plant” Nitrous Oxide – Davy “Laughing Gas” 1800: Described in text its possible surgical use
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http://www. dentalposterart
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“America’s Greatest Medical Discovery”
William T. G. Morton Dentist – ether frolics tooth extraction 1846 invited to MGH Ether Dome Crawford W. Long MD Ether 1842 Georgia Neck Tumor
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Anesthesia Oliver Wendell Holmes, Sr. “Without Sensation”
Goals of General Anesthesia? Surgeon: Don’t Move! Patient: Don’t Remember! Don’t make me puke! No Pain! Anesthesiologist: Unconsciousness, amnesia, immobility, no PONV, retention or improvement of preoperative organ systemic functions…
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Inhalational Anesthetics
How do they work? Nobody Knows! Meyer-Overton hypothesis Higher lipid solubility = higher potency (less movement on incision) GABAA Chloride channel IPSP
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Inhibitory Post-Synaptic Potential
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Safety 1st Too little? Too much? No antidote Remember cutting
Stop breathing, stop circulating No antidote
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Stages to a General Anesthetic
Preop anxiolytic +/- analgesic Preoxygenate (de-nitrogenate) Induction Maintenance Emergence Recovery
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Potency MAC – Side Effect
Minimum Alveolar 1ATM that prevents movement during a skin incision in 50%. Bell-shaped curve x 1.3 for ED95 Influenced by Temp, Age, Rx Not influenced by Sex, O2, pH, BP
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Pharmacokinetics How do most drugs work?
IV/PO → Blood → Organ of interest Induction of anesthesia Inhalational anesthetics are weird. ↑ C.O. → Slower induction
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Pharmacokinetics Goal organ: Brain. How’s it get there?
Machine → Alveoli → Arterial Blood →Brain How do we measure what’s in the brain? Brain → Venous Blood → Alveoli → Machine FA/FI End-tidal / Inspired
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Cascade The faster the agent gets from one compartment to the next, the slower it reaches equilibrium
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Machine → Alveoli Uptake and Distribution Volatile anesthetic is a gas
↑Delivery → ↑ Speed of induction ↑Concentration of agent ↑Minute volume
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After delivery to alveoli, 3 main factors determine uptake into blood:
1. Solubility 2. Partial Pressure Difference 3. Cardiac Output
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FA/FI End-tidal / Inspired
FA, or the end-tidal partial pressure is the brain partial pressure Nitrous Oxide is not soluble Halothane is very soluble in blood
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1. Solubility: Alveoli → Arterial Blood
Blood/Gas partition coefficient: λ More soluble agents reach equilibrium slower than less soluble agents The blood “compartment” is larger for a more soluble agent:
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After delivery to alveoli, 3 main factors determine uptake into blood:
1. Solubility 2. Partial Pressure Difference 3. Cardiac Output
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Alveolus vs. mixed venous partial pressure
Vessel-rich organs 1st, not just brain BHLK Partial pressure drives movement, not concentration During maintenance, skin & muscle start uptake Then fat
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After delivery to alveoli, 3 main factors determine uptake into blood:
1. Solubility 2. Partial Pressure Difference 3. Cardiac Output
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Cardiac Output Arterial Blood → Brain
Increased blood flow near alveolus slows equilibrium because it increases uptake Therefore, it also slows FA/FI Cerebral blood flow is regulated - increase CO should not bring extra agent to the brain
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Emergence Turn off the gas
More fat soluble agent may lead to prolonged awakening 100% 0xygen Breathe Extubate Recover
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Side Effects Cardio- Vascular Pulmonary Skeletal muscle Brain
CO & O2 consumption Vascular Systemic, Pulmonary, Intracranial Pulmonary Respiratory rate, Status asthmaticus Skeletal muscle Brain Uncoupling
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Intravenous Anesthetic Agents
Propofol A.K.A. Uses: Induction, Maintenance, sedation – OR, procedures, ICU Mechanism: IPSP – how?
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Propofol organs CNS Veno- and Arterio- dilator Respiratory Depression
Decreased CMRO2 & ICP Veno- and Arterio- dilator Preload & Afterload reductions Respiratory Depression Context-sensitive half time:
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Intravenous Agents Induction vs. general IV agents
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Thiopental Barbiturate - GABA
Was most-used induction Rx until propofol Not available in U.S. Arterial vasoconstrictor Put brain to sleep Vasoconstrictor and ↓ CMRO2
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Ketamine ↑BP, HR Bad dreams, salivation, twitchy AKA
NMDA N-Methyl-D-aspartate receptor antagonist Dissociative anesthesia Induction & short procedures, gtt for pain Keep breathing, BRONCHODILATOR ↑ CMRO2, cerebral blood flow & ICP ↑BP, HR Bad dreams, salivation, twitchy
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Etomidate Least cardiovascular side effects GABA again
Vasoconstrictor and ↓ CMRO2 Adrenal suppression
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Summary
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Reference
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