Effects of atropine and scopolamine on bradycardia and emetic symptoms in otoplasty
- PMID: 9917050
- DOI: 10.1097/00005537-199901000-00021
Effects of atropine and scopolamine on bradycardia and emetic symptoms in otoplasty
Abstract
Objective: To assess the effects of unilateral or bilateral otoplasty on bradycardia and postoperative nausea and vomiting (PONV) and the efficiency of transdermal scopolamine in the prophylaxis of PONV.
Study design: Post hoc assessment of the data from a double-blind, randomized study.
Methods: Fifty otoplasty patients were studied; half of them received randomly and in double-blind fashion a transdermal therapeutic system (patch) of scopolamine (TTS-scopolamine) as prophylaxis against PONV before general anesthesia. The placebo group received atropine 10 microg x kg(-1) intravenously during induction.
Results: The scopolamine-treated patients suffered more from moderate peroperative bradycardia (8/25; P < .05) than the atropine-treated patients (1/25). Two patients wearing a half of the TTS-scopolamine patch needed intravenous atropine. After unilateral otoplasty, none of the TTS-scopolamine-treated patients and 50% of the atropine-treated patients suffered from PONV. After bilateral operation, the respective incidences were 39% and 81% (P < .01). After unilateral otoplasty no patient needed droperidol, but after bilateral otoplasty, 12 of 19 of the atropine-treated and 4 of 18 (P < .05) of the scopolamine-treated patients needed droperidol. The mean numbers of doses of droperidol were 0.8+/-0.9 and 0.3+/-0.6 (P < .05), respectively. Two additional patients, wearing half of the TTS-scopolamine patch, suffered from mild central anticholinergic syndrome.
Conclusion: TTS-scopolamine offers effective prophylaxis against PONV (auriculoemetic reflex), but does not protect from bradycardia (auriculocardiac reflex) in otoplasty. Cutting of the TTS-scopolamine patch may lead to undesirable side effects.
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