Faculteit Medische Wetenschappen/UMCG, Nanomedicine & Drug Targeting, Faculty of Science and Engineering, Biopharmaceuticals, Discovery, Design and Delivery (BDDD), Critical care, Anesthesiology, Peri-operative and Emergency medicine (CAPE), Center for Liver, Digestive and Metabolic Diseases (CLDM)
المصدر:
Anesthesiology, 89(3), 707-714. LIPPINCOTT WILLIAMS & WILKINS
Background The factors that influence the onset time of submaximal ( Methods Twenty pigs received either suxamethonium or mivacurium. Dose finding (70% block) was done for each pig. The enzymic degradation of the muscle relaxant was randomly inhibited by selective inhibition of plasma cholinesterase activity by tetraisopropyl pyrophosphoramide (10 pigs) or was not inhibited (10 pigs). Plasma cholinesterase activities and the mechanomyographic muscle response after peroneal nerve stimulation (0.1 Hz) were measured. Results Inhibition of plasma cholinesterase activity (by 93% and 89%, respectively) increased the onset time of suxamethonium from a median of 40 s (range, 20-45 s) to 131 s (range, 114-166 s; P = 0.009) and of mivacurium from a median of 52 s (range, 40-59 s) to 105 s (range, 90-125 s; P = 0.009). Inhibition of degradation decreased the effective dose of suxamethonium that resulted in 70% depression of the initial twitch height from 900 microg/kg (range, 400-1,000 microg/kg) to 150 microg/kg (range, 135-150 microg/kg) and of mivacurium from 100 microg/kg (range, 80-150 microg/kg) to 35 microg/kg (range, 20-50 microg/kg). Conclusions Inhibition of the enzymic degradation of suxamethonium and mivacurium increases the onset time of submaximal neuromuscular block. Therefore, pharmacokinetics influence the onset time of submaximal neuromuscular block. These results imply that to obtain an ultrashort onset time, muscle relaxants should be developed that not only have a low affinity for the receptor but also rapidly disappear from plasma.