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1 Local Anesthetics "An anesthetic (or anaesthetic) is a drug that causes anesthesia—reversible loss of sensation. Local anesthetics produce anesthesia by inhibiting excitation of nerve endings or by blocking conduction in peripheral nerves. This is achieved by anesthetics reversibly binding to and inactivating sodium channels. Sodium influx through these channels is necessary for the depolarization of nerve cell membranes and subsequent propagation of impulses along the course of the nerve. When a nerve loses depolarization and capacity to propagate an impulse, the individual loses sensation in the area supplied by the nerve. They contrast with analgesics (painkillers), which relieve pain without eliminating sensation. These drugs are generally administered to facilitate surgery. A wide variety of drugs are used in modern anesthetic practice. Many are rarely used outside of anesthesia, although others are used commonly by all disciplines. Anesthetics are categorized into two classes: general anesthetics, which cause a reversible loss of consciousness, and local anesthetics, which cause a reversible loss of sensation for a limited region of the body while maintaining consciousness. Combinations of anesthetics are sometimes used for their synergistic and additive therapeutic effects. Adverse effects, however, may also be increased. Cocaine was the first anesthetic to be discovered and is the only naturally occurring local anesthetic; all others are synthetically derived. Cocaine was introduced into Europe in the 1800s following its isolation from coca beans. Sigmund Freud, the noted Austrian psychoanalyst, used cocaine on his patients and became addicted through selfexperimentation. Procaine, the first synthetic derivative of cocaine, was developed in 1904. Lofgren later developed lidocaine, the most widely used cocaine derivative, during World War II in 1943. Each of the local anesthetics have the suffix "-caine" in their names. Procaine Amethocaine Cocaine Lidocaine (also known as Lignocaine) 2 Prilocaine Bupivacaine Levobupivacaine Ropivacaine Mepivacaine Dibucaine Local anesthetics are agents that prevent transmission of nerve impulses without causing unconsciousness. They act by binding to fast sodium channels from within (in an open state). Local anesthetics can be either ester or amide based. Ester local anesthetics (e.g., procaine, amethocaine, cocaine) are generally unstable in solution and fast-acting, and allergic reactions are common. Amide local anesthetics (e.g., lidocaine, prilocaine, bupivacaine, levobupivacaine, ropivacaine, mepivacaine and dibucaine) are generally heat-stable, with a long shelf life (around 2 years). They have a slower onset and longer half-life than ester anesthetics, and are usually racemic mixtures, with the exception of levobupivacaine (which is S(-) bupivacaine) and ropivacaine (S(-)-ropivacaine). These agents are generally used within regional and epidural or spinal techniques, due to their longer duration of action, which provides adequate analgesia for surgery, labor, and symptomatic relief. **Note: Only preservative-free local anesthetic agents may be injected intrathecally. Example: Thus, notice the difference in the labels on the bottles of Bupivacaine used in the operating room. Anesthesia uses preservative-free. The bupivacaine used on the surgical field has preservatives in it! OTHER KEY POINTS FOR LOCAL ANESTHESTICS: 3 1. Local anesthetics block voltage-gated sodium channels by interrupting the initiation and propagation of impulses in axons, but they have a wide variety of other biologic actions, both desirable and undesirable. 2. The currently available local anesthetics are of two chemical classes: aminoesters and aminoamides. 3. The low potency and lack of specificity of the available local anesthetics are due in part to the structural constraint that they must have high solubility and diffuse rapidly in both aqueous environments and the lipid phases of biologic membranes. 4. Aminoesters are primarily metabolized by plasma esterases; aminoamides are metabolized primarily by hepatic cytochrome P450-linked enzymes in the liver. 5. The principal systemic toxicities of local anesthetics involve the heart (including atrioventricular conduction block, arrhythmias, myocardial depression, and cardiac arrest) and the brain (including irritability, lethargy, seizures, and generalized CNS depression). Hypoxemia and acidosis exacerbate these toxicities. Resuscitation after bupivacaine overdose is particularly difficult. Therefore, prevention of intravascular injection or overdose is crucial, and major nerve blockade should involve incremental, fractionated dosing. 6. Local anesthetics are directly toxic to nerve at the concentrations supplied in commercial solutions. Intraneural concentrations during regional anesthesia are generally (but not always) below the threshold for toxicity because of spread of solutions through tissues and diffusion gradients from injection sites into nerve. Injection into a constrained tissue space increases the risk of local toxicity. 7. Optimal use of local anesthetics in regional anesthesia requires an understanding of the individual patient's clinical situation; the location, intensity, and duration of regional anesthesia and analgesia required; anatomic factors affecting the deposition of drug near nerves; proper drug selection and dosing; and ongoing assessment of clinical effects after administration of local anesthetics. 8. Recent efforts have led to the development of several new formulations for topical anesthesia. Single-stereoisomer (as opposed to a racemic mixture) formulations have been developed in an effort to reduce systemic toxicity and improve sensory selectivity. 9. Local anesthetics are increasingly being used for postoperative infusion and local and systemic administration in the management of chronic pain. Further research and development may lead to safe, more selective agents that can facilitate more prolonged administration in the setting of acute or chronic pain. Administration of Local Anesthetics Again, for proper administration of local anesthetics, consider the individual characteristics of the patient, dose of local anesthetic to be administered, presence or absence of epinephrine, speed of administration, local tissue vascularity, and technique of administration. In each case, physicians should strive to find the smallest dose possible administered over the longest period of time that achieves adequate anesthesia. 4 Table. Dosages of Local Anesthetics Drug Onset Maximum Dose Duration (with Epinephrine) (with Epinephrine) Lidocaine Mepivacaine Bupivacaine Rapid Rapid Slow 4.5 mg/kg (7 mg/kg) 5 mg/kg (7 mg/kg) 2.5 mg/kg (3 mg/kg) Ropivacaine Medium 2-3 mg/kg 120 min (240 min) 180 min (360 min) 4 hours (8 h) 3 hours (6 h) Levobupivacaine Medium 2.0 mg/kg or 400mg in 24 hrs 4-6 hours (8-12 h) Procaine Chloroprocaine Etidocaine Prilocaine Tetracaine Slow 8 mg/kg (10 mg/kg) Rapid 10 mg/kg (15 mg/kg) Rapid 2.5 mg/kg (4 mg/kg) Medium 5 mg/kg (7.5 mg/kg) Slow 1.5 mg/kg (2.5 mg/kg) 45 min (90 min) 30 min (90 min) 4 hours (8 h) 90 min (360 min) 3 hours (10 h) Note: Epinephrine induces vasoconstriction, delaying absorption of the local anesthetic for longer duration of action at the site of injection. By delaying absorption, epinephrine also increases the safe dose of local anesthetic that may be administered. Adverse reactions may occur following administration of local anesthetics and usually result from administration of too much drug. Adverse reactions may also occur following injection of very vascular sites or from accidental direct intravascular injection of the drug. Deaths following local anesthetic administration are always a result of overdosage. 5 Tissue toxicity can be achieved by all local anesthetics if “high” concentrations are used. Adverse reactions occur primarily in the CNS (neurotoxicity) and cardiovascular system (myotoxicity) because these tissues are also composed of excitable membranes, the target of local anesthetic action. Duration of Effects Local anesthetics last for up to six hours, depending on the agent. The effects will be prolonged if the preparation included epinephrine. Local anesthetics are poorly absorbed through intact skin. One preparation that is absorbed through skin is a mixture of prilocaine and lidocaine, however absorption is relatively slow and anesthesia is limited to about five millimeters under the skin. This is enough to anesthetize the cutaneous receptors. The preparation requires a minimum of 30 minutes to penetrate the skin and will require longer to achieve maximum penetration. Topically applied local anesthetics may last for less than one hour." Combined Information Sources: Canadian Council on Animal Care (CCAC). (2011). CCAC Training module on analgesia: Local anesthesia. Retrieved November 7, 2011, from http://www.ccac.ca/en_/education/niaut/vivaria/analgesia McLeod, I. K. (2008, July 22). Local anesthetics introduction and history. Retrieved November 7, 2011, from http://emedicine.medscape.com/article/873879overview#showall Miller's Anesthesia (6th edition). (2005). Chapter 14: Local anesthetics. Retrieved November 7, 2011, from http://www.anesthesia.net.tw/dokuwiki/doku.php?id=textbook:english:anesthesia