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A touch of anesthesia • Local anesthetics and other things purpose local anesthetics- mechanisms of action, pharmacology and toxicity conscious sedation- definition, drugs and dilemmas Components of anesthesia Anesthesia Amnesia Areflexia Autonomic areflexia Anxiolysis spectrum of sedation minimal sedation moderate sedation deep sedation general anesthesia benefit sedation and analgesia allows patients to tolerate unpleasant procedures by relieving anxiety, discomfort and pain children and uncooperative adults sedation analgesia may expedite procedures that may not necessarily painful but requires that the patient does not move minimal sedation normal response to verbal stimulation airway unaffected spontaneous ventilation unaffected cardiovascular function unaffected cognitive and cordination may be impaired conscious sedation drug induced depression of consciousness in which patients respond purposefully to verbal commands no interventions are required to maintain the airway spontaneous ventilation is maintained cardiovascular function is maintained deep sedation drug induced depression of consciousness during which patients can not be aroused easily but respond purposefully when stimulated repeatedly or painfully ability to maintain respiration may be impaired support of the airway may be needed spontaneous respiration may be impaired cardiovascular function is maintained general anesthesia loss of consciousness patients are not rousable even to pain the ability to maintain ventilation is often impaired assistance is required in maintaining an airway and spontaneous ventilation may be associated drug induced depression of neurological function cardiac function may be impaired Induction Maintenance Emergence Recovery •But a whole lot of other stuff too History be familiar with the sedation oriented aspects of the patients History abnormalities of major organs adverse events with sedation or ANESTHESIA DRUG ALLERGIES AND MEDICATIONS NPO STATUS TABACCO, ALCOHOL AND SUBSTANCE ABUSE PHYSICAL AIRWAY AIRWAY AIRWAY NPO 6 HOURS FOR light meals, FORMULA AND MILK 4 HOURS FOR BREAST MILK 2 HOURS FOR CLEAR FLUIDS VENTILATION MAJOR MORBIDITY DRUG INDUCED RESPIRATORY DYSFUNCTION AND AIRWAY OBSTRUCTION VENTILATION AND OXYGENATION ARE DIFFERENT PULSO OXYMETRY IS NOT A SUBSTITUTE FOR VENTILATION MONITORING MODERATE/DEEP SEDATION LEVEL OF CONSCIOUSNESS OXYGENATION STATUS HEMODYNAMICS EMERGENCY EQUIPMENT PHARMACOLOGIC ANTAGONISTS EQUIPMENT FOR ESTABLISHING AN AIRWAY DEFIBRILLATOR EMERGENCY DRUGS INCLUDING THOSE TO TREAT ANAPHYLAXIS DRUGS SMALL INCREMENTAL DOSES sufficient TIME ELAPSED TO ALLOW FOR THE EFFECT OF THE DRUG three step approach to sedation environment (equipment, monitors, suction, personnel, resuscitation equipment) procedure (diagnostic v therapeutic, duration of time, level of discomfort, position of the patient, special requirements) patient (ability to tolerate sedation vs general anesthesia, ASA Grade and morbidity, Allergies, monitoring requirements) benzodiazapines anxiolytic amnesic hypnotic recovery of psychomotor and amnesic function may be significantly delayed midazolam water soluble non- irritant to the vein short elimination half time( 1-4 hrs) clearance unaffected by H2 antagonists inactive metabolites resedation unlikely diazepam Lipid soluble pain on injection thrombophlebitis common long elimination half life (>20 hrs) Active metabolites (desmethyl-diazepam, oxazepam) opioids fentanyl, hydromorphone, morphine equally effective analgesia with equal side effect profiles used for a balanced effect regional or local anesthesia techniques are n effective or inappropriate awareness - lack amnestic properties effect mu1 analgesia supraspinal affect euphoria pupil miosis respiratory mu2 kappa theta spinal spinal spinal hallucinatio n sedation miosis mydrasis depression depression tachypnea GI nausea GU retention dependanc e yes nausea yes morphine acts presynaptically to decrease substance P hyper-polarizes post synaptic neurons in the dorsal column periaqueductal grey matter CNS effect of morphine nausea and vomiting muscle rigidity cough reflex urinary retention histamine release respiratory depression fentanyl remifentanyl specific groups opioid tolerant groups morbidly obese patients OSA elderly patients ketamine Phencyclidine derivative dissociative sedation Analgesic Induction of anesthesia especially in the setting of bronchospasm and hypotension Antagonist at the calcium channel pore of the NMDA receptor and inhibitor of the NMDA receptor at phencyclidine binding site Onset 30 seconds IV, IM 2-8 minutes ketamine Stimulation of respiration Bronchodilation Sympathetic stimulation with an increase in circulating epinephrine and norepinehrine Increased cerebral metabolic rate increased cerebral blood flow and increased metabolic rate Post-operative nausea and vomiting Side effects of ketamine Rashes Pain on injection Hallucinations Emergence delerium and unpleasant dreams (less likely in children and the elderly) exerts its sympathomimetic activity by inhibiting the re-uptake of catacholamines Severe heart disease Hypertension Porphyria ketamine Duration IV 5- 10 minutes Intramuscular 10-20 minutes • Dose 1 - 2 mg/kg • Intramuscular 5- 10 mg/kg Propofol Phenol derivative White oil in water emulsion 0f 1% or 2% propofol in soybean oil Induction, maintenance, sedation, intractable nausea vomiting, status epileticus Potentates inhibitory neurotransmitters glycine, and gamma aminobutyric acid propofol Onset 30 seconds Duration 10 minutes for a single dose, but an infusion context sensitive half life increases with duration Dose 1.5- 2.5 mg 100 ug/kg minute Propofol Pain on injection Anaphylaxis Not to be used for sedation in PICU as reported metabolic acidosis, myocardial failure and lipaemic serum context sensitive half life is short even after long infusions easy titratable drug low incidence of nausea and vomiting local anesthetics the anatomy, the chemistry and everything else in between April 11 2007 the anatomy mixed nerves that contain both afferent and efferent fibers each axon is surrounded by endoneurium -non neural glial cells individual nerves are bundled into fascicles and and surrounded by perineurium -connective tissue the entire peripheral nerve is wrapped in epineurium composed of dense connective tissue nerve fiber classification size conduction velocity function the more myelin and the bigger the nerve the faster the conduction velocity nerve Aalpha, diamet myelin er 6-22 + A-beta Adelta B C conductio n locatio function n fastes t muscles a/e joints, and muscles proprioce ption 6x 1-4 + slowe r 1.5 x <3 0.31.3 + slowe r sensory nerves pain, touch, temp sympathe tic auto sympatheti c auto, pain, temper afferent 5-10x - slow er O intermediate N chain CnHn CnHn Aromatic ring lipid soluble amide group water soluble proton acceptor acidi c alkaline influenced by PH of surroundings LA H + Cation water soluble, IONIZED LA + H+ uncharged base lipid soluble NON-IONIZED pK a the pH at which the ratio of ionized to non-ionized molecules is 1:1 dissociatic constant lidocaine pK of lidocaine is 7.7 and the acid solution has a pH of 6 ( hydrochloride salt) lidocaine hydrochloride solution in a syringe 99% of the total is in the ionized form and 1% is in the nonionized form. maintains its water solubility once injected .... injected into the tissues, where the pH is 7.4 the ionized portion drops to 76% 24% is now non-ionized or lipid soluble able to diffuse passively down the concentration gradient across the nerve cell membrane through the cell membrane the pH is now 7.1 shifts the equilibrium between the ionised and nonionized form 86% of the total is now back towards the ionized ionized form now means that it can pass into and block the sodium channels reduces the amount of non-ionized form on the inside of the cell to increase the concentration gradient across the cell membrane mechanisms of blockade sodium channel blockade leads to a reduction in the action potential formation and propagation animal studies suggest that there must be a decrease in 50% of the action potential before a loss of function is observed do local anesthetics block the smallest fibers first? small myelinated axons - gamma and delta are most sensitive large myelinated - alpha and beta least suseptable the snall non-myelinated C fibers local anesthetic block of nerve fibers depend on size and type of fiber frequency of membrane stimulation choice of local anesthetic O C O R N R ester s commonly used esters procaine chloroprocaine cocaine tetracaine O R N amides C N R commonly used amides lidocaine bupivacaine mepivacaine ropivacaine influential factors temperature ionic strength the medium surrounding the drug which influences the drug activity by shifting the balance between the the relative concentration of basic or protonated forms. onset of action site and type of nerve proximity of the injection pKa of local anesthetic agents acidity of surroundings systemic absorption decreased systemic absorption will have a greater margin of safety most important the site of injection the dose the physicochemical of the local anesthetic greater the vascularity the faster the absorption the amount of fat in the surrounding areas potency the higher the lipid solubility, the greater the potency duration of action dose local blood flow intrinsic vasoactivity vasoactive additives protein binding local drug metabolism I Can Eat Big Bowls of Spaghetti intercostal nerve block caudal epidural brachial plexus sciatic/femoral subcutaneous dr. Mark Banks, 2003 protein binding amide anesthetics are primarily protein bound bupivicaine, levobupivicaine and ropivicaine are more than 90% bound to alpha acid glycoproteins ( high affinity) and albumin ( high volume and low 1 affinity) free or unbound fraction of the local anesthetic is active distribution organ blood flow partition coefficients of local anesthesia between compartments plasma protein binding organ regional pharmacokinetics duration of action dose local blood flow intrinsic vasoactivity vasoactive additives protein binding local drug metabolism epinephrine prolongation of local block increased intensity if the block decreased systemic absorption of local anesthetic antagonizing inherent vasodilation of local anesthetics lipid relative potency protein binding duration Pka onset procaine low 0.5 6 short 8.9 slow bupivicaine high 4 96 long 8.1 slow 7.7 rapid 8.1 med lidocaine med 1 64 mediu m ropivacaine med 3 95 long tachyphylaxis repeated injections of the same dose of local anesthetics leads to a decreasing effacy dependance on the dosing interval, if the dosing interval is short enough that pain does not develop neither does the tachyphalxis. the opposite is also true allergies true allergic reactions to local anesthetics are rare and usually involve type 1 or Type IV reactions anaphylaxis to amides is rare increased allergic reactions to esters most likely the result of the metabolism to PABA may also be the result of additives methylparaben and metabisulfite QuickTime™ and a GIF decompressor are needed to see this picture. CNS CVS tingling around the mouth tinnitus, visual disturbance light headedness tremor, agitation slurred speech muscle twitching myocardial depression resistant cardiac arrhythmias coma ventricular respiratory arrest arrest readily cross the blood brain barrier CNSanesthetic TOXICITY potency for generalized CNS toxicity approximately parallels the action potential blocking potential acidosis and increased PO2 may worsen increase the risk of toxicity (decrease the plasma protein binding) seizures produce hypoventilation and a metabolic acidosis which may worsen the CNS toxicity cardiovascular toxicity decrease in the rate of depolarization in the fast conduction tissues f the purkinjie fibers and ventricular muscle decreased availability of fast sodium channels in cardiac membranes high concentration of dose dependent negative inotropic action on cardiac muscle cardiovascular toxicity decrease in the rate of depolarization in the fast conduction tissues f the purkinjie fibers and ventricular muscle decreased availability of fast sodium channels in cardiac membranes high concentration of dose dependent negative inotropic action on cardiac muscle comparative cardiovascular toxicity ratio of the dosage of bupivicaine to lidocaine fatal ventricular arrythmias may occur more often with bupivicaine than with lidocaine pregnant patients may be more sensitive to cardiotoxic effects of bupivicaine acidosis and hypoxia enhance the cardiotoxic effects lipid rescue mechanism by which it works is still uncertain carnatine deficiency bupivicaine interfers with carnatine dependent mitochondrial lipid transport anesthesiology V 105 No 1, July 2006 so remember the three Ps of sedation: place, procedure and patient be prepared for the emergencies smaller doses of drugs wait for their effect monitoring, monitoring, monitoring recovery is as important there as it is in the operating room