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Clinical Anesthesia Part I JUNYI LI, MD April 1, 2009 [email protected] 1 Practice of anesthesiology • Practice of anesthesiology is the practice medicine • Preoperative evaluation • Intraoperative management • Postoperative care • Anesthesiology is perioperative medicine • Subspecialty of anesthesiology: Critical care medicine Pain management 2 Practice of anesthesiology • Anesthetic equipment: - Breathing system - Anesthetic machine • Patients monitors • Clinical pharmacology for anesthesia - Induction agents - Inhalation anesthetics - Neuromuscular blocking agents & reversal agents - Local anesthetics 3 Medical gas Gas E-cyl(L) H-cyl(L) Pressure(psi) Color Form O2 Air N2O N2 625-700 625-700 1590 625-700 6000-8000 6000-8000 15900 6000-8000 1800-2200 1800-2200 745 1800-2200 White ? Blue Black Gas Gas Liquid Gas 4 Anesthesia machine 5 Diagram of a generic two-gas anesthesia machine 6 Components of the circle system 7 Standard monitors • Oxygenation Inspired gas: oxygen analyzer Blood oxygenation: pulse oximetry • Ventilation Continual end-tidal CO2 by capnography • Circulation Continual ECG Arterial blood pressure: invasive or noninvasive Pulse or heart sounds by auscultation or a-line • Body temperaure 8 Monitor 9 End-tidal CO2 monitor - capnography 10 Relationship between O2 saturation & PO2 11 Special monitors • • • • CVP – volume status PA – PAP, CO, mixed venous oximetry TEE – volume, contractility, ischemia CNS – ICP, EEG, evoked potential 12 CVP wave form and ECG 13 Pressure wave form during PAC insertion 14 TEE Monitor 15 Induction agents • • • • • • Benzodiazepine: Midazolam, diazepam Propofol Etomidate Thiopental Ketamine Opioids: Fentanyl, Sufentanil, Remifentanil 16 Benzodiazepines • • • • Use for premedication, sedation and induction Minimal CV depression Depress ventilatory response to CO2 Reduce cerebral oxygen consumption, cerebral blood flow and ICP 17 Propofol • Use for induction, maintenance infusion and sedation infusion • Decrease SVR, BP, cardiac contractility, preload and cause significant hypotension • Profound respiratory depression • Decrease cerebral blood flow and ICP • Low rate of postoperative nausea and vomiting 18 Etomidate • Use for induction • Minimal effect on CV system • Less ventilation depression than thiopental or benzodiazepines • Decrease cerebral metabolic rate, CBF & ICP • Long-term infusions lead to adrenocortical suppression 19 Thiopental • Use for induction and sedation • Decrease BP due to vasodilation and decrease of preload • Increase HR due to central vagolytic effect • Decrease ventilatory response to hypocapnia and hypoxia • Decrease cerebral O2 consumption, CBF & ICP 20 Ketamine • • • • • • • • • • Use for induction Increase ABP, HR, CO, PAP and myocardial work. Avoid in CAD, uncontrolled HTN and arterial aneurysm Benefit for acute hypovolemic shock Minimal ventilatory drive depression Potent bronchodilator Increase salivation Increase cerebral O2 consumption, CBF and ICP May has myoclonic activity Undesirable psychotomimetic side effect 21 Opioids • • • • Fentanyl, sufentanil and remifentanil Minimal CV effect Depress ventilation, decrease RR Induce chest wall rigidity to prevent adequate ventilation • Decrease cerebral O2 consumption, CBF & ICP • GI effect: slow gastric emptying time, cause biliary colic 22 Inhalation anesthetics 23 Inhalation anesthetics • Nitrous oxide, chloroform and ether were the first universally accepted general anesthetics • Methoxyflurane and enflurane are no longer used because of toxicity and efficacy • Current inhalation agents: nitrous oxide, halothane, isoflurane, desflurane, seveflurane 24 Pharmacokinetics • • • • Uptake Distribution Metabolism Elimination 25 Factors affecting inspiratory concentration (FI) • Fresh gas flow rate • Volume of breathing circuit • Absorption by machine or breathing circuit 26 Factors affecting alveolar concentration (FA) • Uptake • Ventilation • Concentration 27 Uptake • Anesthetic agents are taken up by pulmonary circulation during induction (FA/FI < 1) • The greater the uptake - The greater the difference between FA and FI (lower FA/FI) - The slower the rate of rise of the alveolar concentration - The slower rate of induction 28 Factors affecting anesthetic uptake • Solubility in the blood • Alveolar blood flow • The difference in partial pressure between gas and venous blood 29 Anesthetic Uptake 30 Solubility in blood • Partition coefficients: the ratio of the concentration of anesthetic gas in each of two phases at equilibrium (equal partial pressures) • The higher the blood/gas coefficient - The greater the solubility - The greater its uptake by pulmonary circulation - Alveolar partial pressure rises more slowly • Induction is prolonged 31 32 Factors affecting anesthetic uptake • Solubility in the blood • Alveolar blood flow • The difference in partial pressure between gas and venous blood 33 Alveolar Blood Flow • Equal to cardiac output (in the absence of pulmonary shunting) • Cardiac output increases - Anesthetic uptake increases - The rise in alveolar partial pressure slows - Induction is delayed • Low-output states overdosage with soluble agents • Myocardial depressant (halothane) lowering cardiac output positive feedback loop 34 Cardiac output and uptake 35 Factors affecting anesthetic uptake • Solubility in the blood • Alveolar blood flow • The difference in partial pressure between gas and venous blood 36 The Partial Pressure Difference between Alveolar Gas and Venous Blood • Depends on tissue uptake • Factors affecting transfer of anesthetic from blood to tissue: 1. Tissue solubility (tissue/blood partition coefficient) 2. Tissue blood flow 3. The difference in partial pressure between arterial blood and tissue 37 Factors affecting anesthetic uptake • Solubility in the blood • Alveolar blood flow • The difference in partial pressure between gas and venous blood 38 Factors affecting alveolar concentration (FA) • Uptake • Ventilation • Concentration 39 Ventilation • Increasing alveolar ventilation - Constantly replacing anesthetic taken up by bloodstream - Better maintenance of alveolar concentration • Ventilation depressant (halothane) - Decrease the rate of rise in alveolar concentration 40 Ventilation and FA/FI ratio 41 Factors affecting alveolar concentration (FA) • Uptake • Ventilation • Concentration 42 Concentration 43 Factors Affecting Arterial Concentration (Fa) • Ventilation/perfusion mismatch increase the alveolar-arterial difference • An increase in alveolar partial pressure • A decrease in arterial partial pressure 44 Factors Affecting Elimination • Elimination 1. Biotransformation: cytochrome P-450 2. Transcutaneous loss: insignificant 3. Exhalation: most important • Factors speed recovery – Elimination of rebreathing, high fresh gas flows, low anesthetic-circuit volume, low absorption by anesthetic circuit, decreased solubility, high cerebral blood flow, increased ventilation, length of time • Diffusion hypoxia: elimination of nitrous oxide is so rapid that alveolar O2 and CO2 are diluted 45 Pharmacodynamics • General anesthesia: - reversible loss of consciousness, - analgesia, - amnesia, - some degree of muscle relaxation • All inhalation agents share a common machanism of action at molecular level • The anesthetic potency correlates with their lipid solubility 46 Pharmacodynamics • Anesthetic binding might significantly modify membrane structure • Alternations in any one of several cellular systems: ligand-gated ion channels, second messenger functions, neurotransmitter receptors • GABA receptor, glycine receptor α1-subunit, nicotinic acetylcholine receptors, NMDA receptors… 47 Minimum Alveolar Concentration • MAC: the alveolar concentration that prevents movement in response to a standardized stimulus in 50% of patients • 1.3 MAC prevent movement in 95% of patients • 0.3-0.4 MAC is associated with awakening • 6% decrease in MAC per decade of age 48 MAC of inhaled anesthetics • • • • • Nitrous oxide: 104% Halothane: 0.74% Isoflurane: 1.5% Desflurane: 6.3% Sevoflurane: 2.0% 49 Nitrous Oxide • The only inorganic anesthetic gas in clinical use • Colorless and odorless • Cardiovascular – Depress myocardial contractility – Arterial BP, CO, HR: unchanged or slightly↑ due to stimulation of catecholamines – Constriction of pulmonary vascular smooth muscle increase pulmonary vascular resistance – Peripheral vascular resistance: not altered – Higher incidence of epinephrine-induced arrhythmia 50 Nitrous Oxide • Respiratory – – – – Respiratory rate: ↑ Tidal volume: ↓ Minute ventilation, resting arterial CO2: minimal change Hypoxic drive (ventilatory response to arterial hypoxia): depressed • Cerebral – CBF, cerebral blood volume, ICP: ↑ – Cerebral oxygen consumption (CMRO2): ↑ 51 Nitrous Oxide • Neuromuscular – Not provide significant muscle relaxation – Not a triggering agent of malignant hyperthermia • Renal – Increase renal vascular resistance – Renal blood flow, glomerular filtration rate, U/O: ↓ • Hepatic – Hepatic blood flow: ↓ • Gastrointestinal – Postoperative nausea and vomiting 52 Nitrous Oxide • Biotransformation & toxicity – Almost all eliminated by exhalation – Biotransformation < 0.01% – Irreversibly oxidize Co in vit.B12 inhibit vit.B12-dependent enzymes interfere myelin formation, DNA synthesis – Prolonged exposure bone marrow suppression, neurological deficiencies – Avoided in pregnant patients 53 Nitrous Oxide • Contraindications – N2O diffuse into the cavity more rapidly than air (principally N2) diffuse out – Pneumothorax, air embolism, acute intestinal obstruction, intracranial air, pulmonary air cysts, intraocular air bubbles, tympanic membrane grafting – Avoided in pulmonary hypertension • Drug interactions – Due to high MAC, combination with more potent agents decrease the requirement of other agents – Potentiates neuromuscular blockade 54 Halothane • Halogenated alkane • Cardiovascular – Direct myocardial depression dose-dependent reduction of arterial BP – Coronary artery vasodilator, but coronary blood flow↓ due to systemic BP↓ – Blunt the reflex: hypotension inhibits baroreceptors in aortic arch and carotid bifurcation vagal stimulation↓ compensatory rise in HR – Sensitzes the heart to the arrhythmogenic effects of epinephrine (<1.5μg/kg) – Systemic vascular resistance: unchanged 55 Halothane • Respiratory – – – – – Rapid, shallow breathing Alveolar ventilation: ↓ Resting PaCO2: ↑ Hypoxic drive: severely depressed A potent bronchodilator, reverses asthma-induced bronchospasm – Depress clearance of mucus promoting postoperative hypoxia and atelectasis 56 Halothane • Cerebral – Dilating cerebral vessels cerebral vascular resistance↓ CBF↑ – Blunt autoregulation (the maintenance of constant CBF during changes in arterial BP) – ICP: ↑, prevented by hyperventilation prior to administration of halothane – Metabolic oxygen requirement: ↓ • Neuromuscular – Relaxes skeletal muscle – A triggering agent of malignant hyperthermia 57 Halothane • Renal – Renal blood flow, GFR, U/O: ↓ – Part of this can be explained by a fall in arterial BP and CO, preoperative hydration limits these changes • Hepatic – Hepatic blood flow: ↓ • Biotransformation & toxicity – Oxidized in liver by cytochrome P-450 – In the absence of O2 hepatotoxic end products – Halothane hepatitis is extremely rare (1/35,000) 58 Halothane • Contraindications – Unexplained liver dysfunction following previous exposure – No evidence associating halothane with worsening of preexisting liver disease – Intracranial mass lesion, hypovolemic, severe cardiac disease… • Drug interactions – Myocardial depression is exacerbation by β-blockers and CCB – With aminophylline serious ventricular arrhythmia 59 Isoflurane • Pungent ethereal odor • A chemical isomer of enflurane • Cardiovascular – – – – Minimal cardiac depression HR: ↑ due to partial preservation of carotid baroreflex Systemic vascular resistance: ↓ BP: ↓ Dilates coronary arteries coronary steal syndrome or drop in perfusion pressure regional myocardial ischemia avoided in patients with CAD 60 Isoflurane • Respiratory – Respiratory depression, minute ventilation: ↓ – Blunt the normal ventilatory response to hypoxia and hypercapnia – Irritate upper airway reflex – A good bronchodilator • Cerebral – CBF, ICP: ↑, reversed by hyperventilation – Cerebral metabolic oxygen requirement: ↓ • Neuromuscular – Relaxes skeletal muscle 61 Isoflurane • Renal – Renal blood flow, GFR, U/O: ↓ • Hepatic – Total hepatic blood flow: ↓ • Biotransformation & toxicity – Limited metabolism 62 Desflurane • • • • • Structure is similar to isoflurane High vapor pressure Low solubility ultrashort duration of action Moderate potency Cardiovascular – Systemic vascular resistance: ↓ BP: ↓ – CO: unchanged or slightly depressed – Rapid increases in concentration lead to transient elevation in HR, BP, catecholamine levels – Not increase coronary artery blood flow 63 Desflurane • Respiratory – – – – Tidal volume: ↓, respiratory rate: ↑ Alveolar ventilation: ↓, resting PaCO2: ↑ Depress the ventilatory response to ↑PaCO2 Pungency and airway irritation • Cerebral – Vasodilate cerebral vasculature CBF, ICP: ↑, lowered by hyperventilation – Cerebral metabolic rate of oxygen: ↓ vasoconstriction moderate the increase in CBF 64 Desflurane • Neuromuscular – Dose-dependent decrease in the response to train-of-four and tetanic peripheral nerve stimulation • Renal – No evidence of any nephrotoxic effects • Hepatic – No evidence of hepatic injury • Biotransformations & toxicity – Minimal metabolism – Degraded by desiccated CO2 absorbent into CO 65 Desflurane • Contraindications – Severe hypovolemia, malignant hyperthermia, intracranial hypertension 66 Sevoflurane • Nonpungency and rapid increase in alveolar anesthetic concentration smooth and rapid inhalation inductions in pediatric and adult patients • Faster emergence associated with greater incidence of delirium in pediatric populations • Cardiovascular – – – – Mildly depress myocardial contractility Systemic vascular resistance, arterial BP: ↓ CO: not maintained well due to little rise in HR Prolong QT interval 67 Sevoflurane • Respiratory – Depress respiration – Reverse bronchospasm • Cerebral – CBF, ICP: slight ↑ – Cerebral metabolic oxygen requirement: ↓ • Neuromuscular – Adequate muscle relaxation for intubation of children • Renal – Renal blood flow: slightly ↓ – Associated with impaired renal tubule function 68 Sevoflurane • Hepatic – Portal vein blood flow: ↓ – Hepatic artery blood flow: ↑ • Biotransformation & toxicity – Liver microsomal enzyme P-450 – Degraded by alkali (barium hydroxide lime, soda lime), producing nephrotoxic end products (compound A) – Fresh gas flows be at least 2 L/min – Not be used in patients with preexisting renal dysfunction 69 Muscle Relaxants 70 Introduction 0f Muscle relaxant 1494 - 1942 Curare 1947 - 1951 Succinylcholine chloride, Gallamine, Metocurine, Decamethonium 1960’s Alcuronium 1970’s Pancuronium bromide, Fazadinium 1980’s Vecuronium bromide, Atracurium besylate 1990 Pipecuronium bromide 1991 Doxacurium chloride 1992 Mivacurium chloride 1994 Rocuronium bromide 1999 Rapacuronium bromide 71 Depolarizing & Nondepolarizing Blockade • Depolarizing muscle relaxants acts as Ach receptor agonists, but not metabolized by acetylcholinesterase, resulting in a prolonged depolarization of the muscle end-plate • Nondepolarizing muscle relaxants function as competitive antagonists of Ach 72 Structural Classes of Nondepolarizing Muscle relaxant • Steroids: Rocuronium bromide, Vecuronium bromide, Pancuronium bromide, Pipecuronium bromide • Naturally occurring benzylisoquinolines: curare, metocurine • Benzylisoquinoliniums: Atracurium besylate, Mivacurium chloride, Doxacurium chloride 73 The Ideal Relaxant • • • • • • Nondepolarizing Rapid onset Dose-dependent duration No side-effects Elimination independent of organ function No active or toxic metabolites 74 Assessing Postoperative Neuromuscular Function Sustained 5-second head lift Ability to appose incisors (clench teeth) Negative inspiratory force > – 40 cm H2O Ability to open eyes wide for 5 seconds Hand-grip strength Sustained arm/leg lift Quality of speaking voice Tongue protrusion 75 Neuromuscular Blockers Steroids 1. Vagolytic Partially block cardiac muscarinic receptor involved in heart rate slowing, resulting in increased heart rate: rapacuronium > pancuronium > rocuronium > vecuronium 2. Generally do not promote histamine release Exception: rapacuronium 3. Organ-dependent elimination Kidneys and liver 76 Neuromuscular Blockers: Benzolisoquinolines 1. Histamine release dTc > atracurium > mivacurium > cisatracurium can cause rare bronchospasm, decreased blood pressure, increase of heart rate 2. Generally organ-independent elimination1 esp: atracurium, cisatracurium, mivacurium 3. Noncumulative2 4. Absence of vagolytic effect these drugs do not block cardiac-vagal (muscarinic) receptors 77 Classification of Neuromuscular Blockers by Duration of Action (Minutes) UltraShort Short Intermediate Long Clinical duration (min) 6-8 12 - 20 30 - 45 >60 Recovery time (min) <15 25 - 30 50 - 70 90 -180 Exsamples succiylcholine mivacurium cisatracurium doxacurium 78 DURATION OF ACTION • Ultra-Short: Succinylcholine chloride • Short: Mivacurium chloride • Intermediate: Rocuronium bromide, Vecuronium bromide, Atracurium besylate Cisatracurium • Long: Pancuronium bromide, curare, metocurine, Pipecuronium bromide, Doxacurium chloride 79 Muscle Relaxants Succinylcholine • Depolarizing muscle ralaxant • Rapid onset of action (30-60 s) and short duration of action (less than 10 min) • Metabolized by blood pseudocholinesterase • Side effect & clinical consideration: Bradycardia Hyperkalemia Muscle pain Increased intraocular, intragastric and intracranial pressure Malignant hyperthermia 80 Muscle Relaxants Pancuronium • Vagolytic: increases heart rate, may require beta blockade • Easy to use • Long duration of action • Slower onset • Not easily reversed at end of case 81 Muscle Relaxants Vecuronium • No effects on HR, BP • Requires reconstitution • Reliable and controllable duration of action • Slower onset • Stable hemodynamics/no histamine release 82 Muscle Relaxants Cisatracurium • Organ-independent Hofmann elimination. • Good for renal and liver dysfunction patients • No effect on hemodynamics 83 Muscle Relaxants Rocuronium • No effects on HR, BP • Easy to use, liquid, no refrigeration • Reliable and controllable duration of action • Fast onset • Stable hemodynamics/no histamine release 84 Effects of Rocuronium on Heart Rate 600 mcg/kg 900 mcg/kg 1200 mcg/kg Heart Rate (beats/min) 100 90 80 70 60 50 40 0.0 1.0 2.0 3.0 4.0 5.0 6.0 Time (minutes) Levy et al. Anesth Analg 1994;78,318-321. 85 Mean Arterial Pressure (mmHg) Effects of Rocuronium on Mean Arterial Pressure 600 mcg/kg 900 mcg/kg 1200 mcg/kg 100 90 80 70 60 50 0.0 1.0 2.0 3.0 4.0 5.0 6.0 Time (minutes) Levy et al. Anesth Analg 1994;78,318-321. 86 Plasma Histamine (ng/ml) Effects of Rocuronium on Histamine Release 3.0 2.5 600 mcg/kg 900 mcg/kg 1200 mcg/kg 2.0 1.5 1.0 0.5 0.0 0.0 1.0 2.0 3.0 4.0 Time (minutes) Levy et al. Anesth Analg 1994;78,318-321. 5.0 87 Muscle Relaxants Rapacuronium • Minimal effects on HR, BP • Controllable duration of action • Fast onset • Stable hemodynamics/minimal histamine release • Potential for bronchospasm led to its removal in 2001 88 Rationale for Selection of NMBAs: Cardiovascular stability Nondepolarizing vs depolarizing Organ-independent elimination Clinically significant active or toxic metabolites Predictability of duration Cumulative effects Reversibility Time to onset Stability of solution Cost 89 Local Anesthetics 90 Local Anesthetic 1. Interrupts pain impulses without a loss of patient consciousness 2. The process is completely reversible 3. Does not produce any residual effect on the nerve fiber. 91 Amides and Esters • • • • Lidocaine (Xylocaine) • Bupivacaine (Marcaine) Etidocaine (Duranest) • • Mepivacaine (Carbocaine) • • Prilocaine (Citanest) • Ropivacaine Chloroprocaine (Nesacaine) Cocaine (crack) Procaine Tetracaine (Pontocaine) 92 Local Anesthetics Esters: • These include cocaine, procaine, tetracaine, and chloroprocaine. • They are hydrolyzed in plasma by pseudocholinesterase. • Paraaminobenzoic acid (PABA) is by-product of metabolism • PABA is the cause of allergic reactions seen with these agents 93 Local Anesthetics Amides: • Include lidocaine, mepivicaine, prilocaine, bupivacaine, and etidocaine • Metabolized in the liver to inactive agents • True allergic reactions are rare (especially with lidocaine) 94 Mechanism of action • Local anesthetics bind directly to the intracellular voltage-dependent sodium channels • Inactivates sodium channels at specific sites within the channel 95 Mechanism of action Block sodium channel of never fiber • • • • • • • slow rate of depolarization reduce height of action potential reduce rate of rise of action potential slow axonal conduction ultimately prevent propagation of action potential do not alter resting membrane potential increase threshold potential 96 Factors affecting LA action Effect of pH • Charged (cationic) form binds to receptor site inside the cells • Uncharged form penetrates membrane which determine the onset time • Efficacy of drug can be changed by altering extracellular or intracellular pH • LA are weak base 97 Factors affect LA action Lipid solubility • Most lipid soluble: – Tetracaine – Bupivicaine – Ropivacaine – Etidocaine • Increased lipid solubility has greater potency and longer duration of action. • Decreased lipid solubility means a faster onset of action. 98 Factors affect LA action • Protein binding - increased binding increases duration of action • Diffusibility - increased diffusibility decreases time of onset 99 Factors affect LA action Vasoconstrictors • Vasoconstrictors decrease the rate of vascular absorption which • Allows more anesthetic to reach the nerve membrane and • Improves the depth of anesthesia. 100 Order of sensory function block • • • • • • 1. pain 2. cold 3. warmth 4. touch 5. deep pressure 6. motor Recovery in reverse order 101 LA Absorption • Mucous membranes easily absorb LA • Skin is a different story… • Which LAs can we use for this? – EMLA cream- 5% lidocaine and 5% prilocaine in an oil-water emulsion – An occlusive dressing placed for 1 hour will penetrate 3-5mm and last about 1-2 hours. – Typically 1-2 grams of drug per 10cm2 of skin 102 Rate of systemic absorption • Intravenous > tracheal > intercostal > caudal > paracervical > epidural> brachial plexus > sciatic > subcutaneous • Any vasoconstrictor present?? • High tissue binding also decreases the rate of absorption 103 Types of Local Anesthesia Local Infiltration (Local Anesthesia): • Use for skin and subcutaneous tissue infiltrating block • Local infiltration is used primarily for surgical procedures involving a small area of tissue (for example, suturing a cut). 104 Types of Local Anesthesia Topical Block: • Applying to mucous membrane surfaces and blocking the nerve terminals in the mucosa. • Used during examination procedures involving the respiratory tract. • Local anesthetic is always used without epinephrine. 105 Types of Local Anesthesia Nerve Block • Local anesthetic is injected around a nerve that leads to the operative site. • Usually more concentrated forms of local anesthetic solutions are used for this type of anesthesia. 106 Types of Local Anesthesia Epidural Anesthesia • This type of anesthesia is accomplished by injecting a local anesthetic into the Epidural space. 107 Types of Local Anesthesia Spinal Anesthesia • Local anesthetic is injected into the subarachnoid space of the spinal cord 108 Clinical Uses • Esters – Benzocaine- Topical, duration of 30 minutes to 1 hour – Chloroprocaine- Epidural, infiltration and peripheral nerve block, max dose 12mg/kg, duration 30minutes to 1 hour – Cocaine- Topical, 3mg/kg max., 30 minutes to one hour – Tetracaine- Spinal, topical, 3mg/kg max., 1.5-6 hours duration 109 Clinical Uses Amides • Bupivacaine- Epidural, spinal, infiltration, peripheral nerve block, 3mg/kg max., 1.5-8 hours duration • Lidocaine- Epidural, spinal, infiltration, peripheral nerve block, intravenous regional, topical, 4.5mg/kg or 7mg/kg with epi, 0.75-2 hours duration • Mepivacaine- Epidural, infiltration, peripheral nerve block, 4.5mg/kg or 7mg/kg with epi, 1-2 hours • Prilocaine- Peripheral nerve block (dental), 8mg/kg, 30 minutes to 1 hour duration • Ropivacaine- Epidural, spinal, infiltration, peripheral nerve block, 3mg/kg, 1.5-8 hours duration 110 Local Anesthetic Toxicity • Neurological – Symptoms include perioral numbness, tongue paresthesia, dizziness, tinnitus, blurred vision, restlessness, agitation, nervousness, paranoia, slurred speech, drowsiness, unconsciousness. – Muscle twitching heralds the onset of tonic-clonic seizures with respiratory arrest to follow. – Cauda equina syndrome by repeated doses of 5% lidocaine and 5% tetracaine 111 Local anesthestic toxicity Respiratory system • Respiratory center may be depressed (medullary)…postretrobulbar apnea syndrome • Lidocaine depresses hypoxic respiratory drive (PaO2) • Direct paralysis of phrenic or intercostal nerves 112 Local Anesthetic toxicity • Depress spontaneous Phase IV depolarization and reduce the duration of the refractory period • Depress myocardial contractility and conduction velocity at higher concentrations • Smooth muscle relaxation and vasodilation • May lead to bradycardia, heart block, hypotension and cardiac arrest 113 True Allergic Reactions to LA’s • Very uncommon • Esters more likely because of p-aminobenzoic acid (allergen) • Methylparaben preservative present in amides is also a known allergen 114 Local Anesthetic Toxicity Muscle • Cause myonecrosis when injected directly into the muscle • When steroid or epi added the myonecrosis is worsened • Regeneration usually takes 3-4 weeks • Ropivacaine produces less sereve muscle injury than bupivacaine 115