| Literature DB >> 32488680 |
J P van den Berg1, A R Absalom2, A M Venema2, A F Kalmar2, K Van Amsterdam2, L N Hannivoort2, J H Proost2, S Meier2, T W L Scheeren2, M M R F Struys2,3, H E M Vereecke2,4.
Abstract
This prospective study evaluates haemodynamic and electroencephalographic effects observed when administering four combinations of effect-site concentrations of propofol (CePROP) and remifentanil (CeREMI), all yielding a single predicted probability of tolerance of laryngoscopy of 90% (PTOL = 90%) according to the Bouillon interaction model. We aimed to identify combinations of CePROP and CeREMI along a single isobole of PTOL that result in favourable hypnotic and haemodynamic conditions. This knowledge could be of advantage in the development of drug advisory monitoring technology. 80 patients (18-90 years of age, ASA I-III) were randomized into four groups and titrated towards CePROP (Schnider model, ug⋅ml-1) and CeREMI (Minto model, ng⋅ml-1) of respectively 8.6 and 1, 5.9 and 2, 3.6 and 4 and 2.0 and 8. After eleven minutes of equilibration, baseline measurements of haemodynamic endpoints and bispectral index were compared with three minutes of responsiveness measurements after laryngoscopy. Before laryngoscopy, bispectral index differed significantly (p < 0.0001) between groups in concordance with CePROP. Heart rate decreased with increasing CeREMI (p = 0.001). The haemodynamic and arousal responses evoked by laryngoscopy were not significantly different between groups, but CePROP = 3.6 μg⋅ml-1 and CeREMI = 4 ng⋅ml-1 evoked the lowest median value for ∆HR and ∆SAP after laryngoscopy. This study provides clinical insight on the haemodynamic and hypnotic consequences, when a model based predicted PTOL is used as a target for combined effect-site controlled target- controlled infusion of propofol and remifentanil. Heart rate and bispectral index were significantly different between groups despite a theoretical equipotency for PTOL, suggesting that each component of the anaesthetic state (immobility, analgesia, and hypnotic drug effect) should be considered as independent neurophysiological and pharmacological phenomena. However, claims of (in)accuracy of the predicted PTOL must be considered preliminary because larger numbers of observations are required for that goal.Entities:
Keywords: Electroencephalographic monitoring; Haemodynamic monitoring; Interaction; Pharmacology
Year: 2020 PMID: 32488680 PMCID: PMC8286956 DOI: 10.1007/s10877-020-00540-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Clin Monit Comput ISSN: 1387-1307 Impact factor: 2.502
Fig. 1The left panel shows the three-dimensional response surface model of propofol and remifentanil based on the data of Bouillon et al. [3]. A response surface model is a mathematical description, visualized in a 3-dimensional graph depicting the effect (in this case, the probability of tolerance of laryngoscopy (PTOL)) (z-axis) evoked by combining two different drugs (respectively the effect-site concentration of propofol and remifentanil in the x and y axis). The thick line represents the PTOL = 90% isobole, which is also depicted in the two-dimensional cross-sectional graph (right panel), representing the isoboles that connect all combinations of drugs that evoke identical effect. The bullets on the isobole represent the four drug combinations used in this study (A-D from left to right, respectively)
Patient characteristics and comparison between haemodynamic- and electroencephalographic baseline measurements. Baseline heart rate was different between groups (p < 0.000), as was BIS between groups (p < 0.001)
| Group A | Group B | Group C | Group D | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| A: Patient characteristics | |||||
Age (years); Mean (SD) Range [] | 50 (± 13.7) [46] | 52 (± 13.1) [50] | 51 (± 17.5) [56] | 58 (± 10.7) [33] | |
| Gender (m/f) | 10/10 | 10/10 | 10/10 | 12/8 | |
BMI (kg⋅m−2); Median [range] | 26 [23–29] | 26 [24–28] | 26 [24–26] | 26.5 [23–28] | |
B: Median baseline values Range [P25-P75] | |||||
| p | |||||
| Heart rate (beats ⋅ min−1) | 71# [60–73] | 68$ % [63–72] | 60$ [56–63] | 60# % [56–62] | 0.003 |
| Systolic blood pressure (mmHg) | 94 [84–101] | 90 [79–105] | 97 [87–101] | 104 [80–108] | 0.629 |
| Stroke volume index (ml ⋅ m−2) | 44 [36–45] | 39 [35–46] | 42 [34–46] | 40 [34–48] | 0.947 |
| Systemic vascular resistance index (dyn ⋅ s ⋅ cm−5) | 2104 [1804–2337] | 2151 [1902–2544] | 2226 [2063–2556] | 2665 [2021–3095] | 0.333 |
| Cardiac Index (L ⋅ min−1 ⋅ m−2) | 2.60 [2.38–3.23] | 2.55 [2.30–3.20] | 2.35 [2.19–2.62] | 2.25 [1.98–2.80] | 0.162 |
| BIS | 25 @ ^ [23–27] | 30 + § [25–40] | 44 @ + £ [41–55] | 64 ^ § £ [59–72] | < 0.001 |
#p = 0.004; $p = 0,045; %, @, ^,+, § and £ p < 0.0001
Fig. 2CONSORT diagram
Fig. 3The evolution of the observed haemodynamic variables between − 60 to + 120 s from the start of laryngoscopy (Time = 0). The grey lines represent the results for each individual patient. The black line is the population median value. Group A (remifentanil 1 ng ⋅ ml−1 and propofol 8.6 µg ⋅ ml−1), Group B (remifentanil 2 ng ⋅ ml−1 and propofol 5.9 µg ⋅ ml−1), Group C (remifentanil 4 ng ⋅ ml−1 and propofol 3.6 µg ⋅ ml−1), and Group D (remifentanil 8 ng ⋅ ml−1 and propofol 2.0 µg ⋅ ml−1)
Fig. 4The evolution of the observed electroencephalographic variables between − 60 to + 120 s from the start of laryngoscopy (Time = 0). The grey lines represent the results for each individual patient. The black line is the population median value. Group A (remifentanil 1 ng ⋅ ml−1 and propofol 8.6 µg ⋅ ml−1), Group B (remifentanil 2 ng ⋅ ml−1 and propofol 5.9 µg ⋅ ml−1), Group C (remifentanil 4 ng ⋅ ml−1 and propofol 3.6 µg ⋅ ml−1), and Group D (remifentanil 8 ng ⋅ ml−1 and propofol 2.0 µg ⋅ ml−1). BIS SR = suppression ratio as measured by the bispectral index monitor
Comparison of difference between the median value before versus the maximum value after laryngoscopy for each variable. BIS was different between groups (p = 0.006), as was systolic blood pressure (p = 0.03)
| Δpre-post stimulation | Group A | Group B | Group C | Group D | P |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Δ Heart rate (beats ⋅ min−1) | 10 [7–14] | 10 [4–15] | 6 [3–16] | 8 [4–30] | 0.498 |
| Δ Systolic blood pressure (mmHg) | 32 [21–40] | 30 [18–45] | 19 [8–32] | 21 [11–40] | 0.153 |
| Δ Stroke volume index (ml ⋅ m−2) | 7 [5–9] | 8 [5–9] | 6 [4–8] | 5 [4–8] | 0.750 |
| Δ Systemic vascular resistance index (dyn ⋅ s ⋅ cm−5) | 485 [269–1143] | 849 [455–1313] | 532 [412–1029] | 800 [329–3726] | 0.558 |
| Δ Cardiac index (L ⋅ min−1 ⋅ m−2) | 0.55 [0.38–0.72] | 0.40 [0.38–0.70] | 0.50 [0.2–0.72] | 0.40 [0.3–1.1] | 0.799 |
| Δ BIS | 3# [2–7] | 7 [3–11] | 11# [7–17] | 8 [4–12] | 0.011 |
#p = 0.005