Literature DB >> 3048150

In vitro anesthetic washin and washout via bubble oxygenators: influence of anesthetic solubility and rates of carrier gas inflow and pump blood flow.

N A Nussmeier1, G J Moskowitz, R B Weiskopf, N H Cohen, D M Fisher, E I Eger.   

Abstract

The uptake and elimination of volatile anesthetic agents administered to patients under conditions of hemodilution and hypothermia during cardiopulmonary bypass have not been determined. To define the limitations imposed by oxygenators, we defined washin and washout curves for volatile anesthetic agents administered to bubble oxygenators primed with diluted blood (without connection to a patient). There was rapid equilibration of anesthetic partial pressure between delivered gas and blood (85-90% within 16 minutes). Increasing the gas inflow to the oxygenator from 3 to 12 L/min hastened washin and washout slightly, while increasing the pump blood flow from 3 to 5 L/min had no effect. Rates of washin and washout of anesthetics differed as a function of their blood/gas solubilities: enflurane greater than isoflurane greater than halothane during washin; isoflurane greater than enflurane greater than halothane during washout. However, these differences were small. Oxygenator exhaust partial pressures of anesthetic correlated with simultaneously obtained blood partial pressures, suggesting that monitoring exhaust gas may be useful clinically.

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Year:  1988        PMID: 3048150

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Anesth Analg        ISSN: 0003-2999            Impact factor:   5.108


  3 in total

1.  Xenon washout during in-vitro extracorporeal circulation using different oxygenators.

Authors:  Uwe Schirmer; Helmut Reinelt; Matthias Erber; Michael Schmidt; Thomas Marx
Journal:  J Clin Monit Comput       Date:  2002 Apr-May       Impact factor: 2.502

2.  Washin and washout of isoflurane during cardiopulmonary bypass.

Authors:  J M Henderson; H J Nathan; M Lalande; M H Winkler; L M Dubé
Journal:  Can J Anaesth       Date:  1988-11       Impact factor: 5.063

3.  Protocol for the BAG-RECALL clinical trial: a prospective, multi-center, randomized, controlled trial to determine whether a bispectral index-guided protocol is superior to an anesthesia gas-guided protocol in reducing intraoperative awareness with explicit recall in high risk surgical patients.

Authors:  Michael S Avidan; Ben J Palanca; David Glick; Eric Jacobsohn; Alex Villafranca; Michael O'Connor; George A Mashour
Journal:  BMC Anesthesiol       Date:  2009-11-30       Impact factor: 2.217

  3 in total

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