Literature DB >> 10839930

Malignant hyperthermia phenotype: hypotension induced by succinylcholine in susceptible swine.

D C Sigg1, P A Iaizzo.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Succinylcholine causes immediate and severe arterial hypotension in swine with the malignant hyperthermia phenotype. The underlying mechanisms are unknown.
METHODS: Malignant hyperthermia-susceptible (MHS; n = 10) and normal swine (n = 5) were anesthetized with thiopental. The following were monitored: electrocardiogram; arterial blood pressure; pulmonary artery, central venous, and left and right ventricular pressure; cardiac output; end-tidal carbon dioxide; core temperature; peripheral-blood flows; and arterial blood gases. After a control period, 2 mg/kg succinylcholine was given intravenously. Three MHS animals received 1 mg/kg vecuronium and two MHS animals received 2.5 mg/kg dantrolene intravenously. The effects of succinylcholine on left and right ventricular pressure and contractility were analyzed in isolated hearts. The effects of 0.06 mm succinylcholine on isometric tension development were recorded in isolated femoral artery rings.
RESULTS: Succinylcholine caused an early, severe decrease in blood pressure, cardiac output, left ventricular pressure, and left ventricular contractility in MHS swine but not in normal swine; no significant differences were found in heart rate, right ventricular parameters, systemic vascular resistance, and preload (pulmonary diastolic pressure, central venous pressure). The succinylcholine-induced hypotension and associated effects were not prevented by dantrolene. However, pretreatment with high-dose vecuronium prevented not only the cardiovascular depression, but also MH. In addition, no phenotypic differences of succinylcholine on contractility or left ventricular pressure were observed in the isolated working hearts. Similary, succinylcholine did not cause a significantly different relaxation in rings in either phenotype.
CONCLUSION: Succinylcholine-induced hypotension occurred before muscle hypermetabolism in MHS swine. Succinylcholine had no differential physiologic effects on either the isolated heart or on isolated arteries. This hypotension could not be prevented by dantrolene but was prevented by pretreatment with high-dose vecuronium. Thus, an indirect mechanism such as the release of a cardiac depressant from skeletal muscle may have caused this hypotensive response.

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Year:  2000        PMID: 10839930     DOI: 10.1097/00000542-200006000-00038

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Anesthesiology        ISSN: 0003-3022            Impact factor:   7.892


  2 in total

Review 1.  In vitro contractile studies within isolated tissue baths: Translational research from Visible Heart® Laboratories.

Authors:  Weston J Upchurch; Paul A Iaizzo
Journal:  Exp Biol Med (Maywood)       Date:  2022-01-22

2.  The effect of succinylcholine on malignant hyperthermia events in susceptible swine.

Authors:  Frank Schuster; Stephan Johannsen; Susanne Moegele; Thomas Metterlein; Norbert Roewer; Martin Anetseder
Journal:  BMC Anesthesiol       Date:  2014-03-07       Impact factor: 2.217

  2 in total

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