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Clinical Trial
. 2002 Jun;94(6):1530-3, table of contents.
doi: 10.1097/00000539-200206000-00028.

Remifentanil dose/electroencephalogram bispectral response during combined propofol/regional anesthesia

Affiliations
Clinical Trial

Remifentanil dose/electroencephalogram bispectral response during combined propofol/regional anesthesia

Toshiya Koitabashi et al. Anesth Analg. 2002 Jun.

Abstract

The effect of opioid administration on the bispectral index (BIS) during general anesthesia is controversial. Several investigators have reported BIS to be insensitive to opioid addition, whereas others have found a hypnotic response. We designed this study to examine the effect of remifentanil on BIS during combined regional/general propofol anesthesia under steady-state conditions. After Human Investigations Committee approval, 19 healthy ASA physical status I or II patients were enrolled in a prospective experimental design. Regional anesthesia was initiated and general anesthesia induced by using computer-assisted continuous infusion of propofol. Propofol was incrementally adjusted to a BIS of approximately 60. After 20 min at a stable propofol infusion rate, a remifentanil computer-assisted continuous infusion (effect-site target concentration of 0.5, 2.5, and then 10 ng/mL) was sequentially administered at stepped 15-min intervals. BIS decreased from 56 +/- 2 to 44 +/- 1, 95% spectral edge frequency from 17.9 +/- 0.5 Hz to 15.0 +/- 0.4 Hz, heart rate from 84 +/- 5 bpm to 62 +/- 4 bpm, and mean arterial blood pressure from 93 +/- 4 mm Hg to 69 +/- 3 mm Hg with increasing remifentanil concentration. A significant linear correlation between BIS, 95% spectral edge frequency, heart rate, and log (remifentanil effect-site) concentration was found. The change in baseline BIS was relatively modest but significant, suggesting that remifentanil has some sedative/hypnotic properties, or that it potentiates the hypnotic effect of propofol.

Implications: This experiment identified a significant, dose-dependent decrease in bispectral index (BIS), 95% spectral edge frequency, heart rate, and mean arterial blood pressure with increasing remifentanil dose. The change in baseline BIS was relatively modest but significant, suggesting that remifentanil has some sedative/hypnotic properties, or that it potentiates the hypnotic effect of propofol.

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