Neuromuscular effects of atracurium during halothane-nitrous oxide and enflurane-nitrous oxide anesthesia in humans
- PMID: 3160265
- DOI: 10.1097/00000542-198507000-00003
Neuromuscular effects of atracurium during halothane-nitrous oxide and enflurane-nitrous oxide anesthesia in humans
Abstract
To compare the effect of halothane and enflurane on an atracurium-induced neuromuscular blockade, the authors studied 40 patients during elective surgery. During 1.25 MAC enflurane-nitrous oxide (n = 20) or halothane-nitrous oxide (n = 20) (MAC value includes contribution from 60% nitrous oxide), the doses depressing twitch tension 50% (ED50S) for atracurium were 70 and 77 micrograms/kg, respectively. The difference was not significant. Time from injection to peak effect did not differ between groups. However, the duration of action of atracurium (expressed as duration 50 or the duration of a 50% blockade) was longer during enflurane-nitrous oxide anesthesia (34.2 min) than during halothane-nitrous oxide anesthesia (25.5 min) (P less than 0.05). The authors conclude that the potency of atracurium does not differ during halothane-nitrous oxide and enflurane-nitrous oxide anesthesia. Combining the results of this study with a previous study (atracurium ED50 = 68 micrograms/kg and 83 micrograms/kg during isoflurane-nitrous oxide and fentanyl-nitrous oxide anesthesia respectively), the potency of atracurium does not differ by more than 20% among the four anesthetic techniques studied. The background anesthetic appears to have less effect on an atracurium-induced neuromuscular blockade than on one produced by other longer-acting nondepolarizing muscle relaxants (e.g., pancuronium and d-tubocurarine).
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