Literature DB >> 28857808

Effect of Bronchoconstriction-induced Ventilation-Perfusion Mismatch on Uptake and Elimination of Isoflurane and Desflurane.

Moritz Kretzschmar1, Alf Kozian, James E Baumgardner, Joao Batista Borges, Göran Hedenstierna, Anders Larsson, Thomas Hachenberg, Thomas Schilling.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Increasing numbers of patients with obstructive lung diseases need anesthesia for surgery. These conditions are associated with pulmonary ventilation/perfusion (VA/Q) mismatch affecting kinetics of volatile anesthetics. Pure shunt might delay uptake of less soluble anesthetic agents but other forms of VA/Q scatter have not yet been examined. Volatile anesthetics with higher blood solubility would be less affected by VA/Q mismatch. We therefore compared uptake and elimination of higher soluble isoflurane and less soluble desflurane in a piglet model.
METHODS: Juvenile piglets (26.7 ± 1.5 kg) received either isoflurane (n = 7) or desflurane (n = 7). Arterial and mixed venous blood samples were obtained during wash-in and wash-out of volatile anesthetics before and during bronchoconstriction by methacholine inhalation (100 μg/ml). Total uptake and elimination were calculated based on partial pressure measurements by micropore membrane inlet mass spectrometry and literature-derived partition coefficients and assumed end-expired to arterial gradients to be negligible. VA/Q distribution was assessed by the multiple inert gas elimination technique.
RESULTS: Before methacholine inhalation, isoflurane arterial partial pressures reached 90% of final plateau within 16 min and decreased to 10% after 28 min. By methacholine nebulization, arterial uptake and elimination delayed to 35 and 44 min. Desflurane needed 4 min during wash-in and 6 min during wash-out, but with bronchoconstriction 90% of both uptake and elimination was reached within 15 min.
CONCLUSIONS: Inhaled methacholine induced bronchoconstriction and inhomogeneous VA/Q distribution. Solubility of inhalational anesthetics significantly influenced pharmacokinetics: higher soluble isoflurane is less affected than fairly insoluble desflurane, indicating different uptake and elimination during bronchoconstriction.

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Year:  2017        PMID: 28857808     DOI: 10.1097/ALN.0000000000001847

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


  2 in total

1.  Can Mathematical Modeling Explain the Measured Magnitude of the Second Gas Effect?

Authors:  Ben Korman; Ranjan K Dash; Philip J Peyton
Journal:  Anesthesiology       Date:  2018-06       Impact factor: 7.892

2.  Longer time to extubation after general anesthesia with desflurane in patients with obstructive respiratory dysfunction: a retrospective study.

Authors:  Eriko Takeyama; Mariko Nakajima; Yukiko Nakanishi; Eizo Amano; Hiromi Shibuya
Journal:  JA Clin Rep       Date:  2021-04-30
  2 in total

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