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Clinical Aspect of General Anesthetics

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Pharm PHCL 5-103 Clinical Aspect of General Anesthetics James Q. Swift D.D.S. Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Clinical Aspect of General Anesthetics


1
Clinical Aspect of General Anesthetics
Pharm PHCL 5-103
  • James Q. Swift D.D.S.
  • Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery

2
Anxiety
  • Probably the most frequent etiologic factor in
    the generation of a medical emergency
  • In combination with a labile medically
    compromised patient, contributes to medical
    crisis and possible fatality
  • Can be effectively managed in many ways,
    including the use of sedation and anesthesia

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Anxiety and Pain Control
  • General Anesthesiaunconsciousness
  • Sedationdiminished consciousness
  • Nitrous oxidesedation

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Behavioral Manifestations of Anesthesia (Guedel)
  • Stage I - Analgesia
  • Stage II - Delirium
  • Stage III - Surgical Anesthesia
  • Plane 1
  • Plane 2
  • Plane 3
  • Plane 4
  • Stage IV - Medullary Paralysis

8
FIGURE 18-2 Guedels scheme of progressive CNS
depression produced by the anesthetic ether.
Changes in physiologic functions are shown for
the different stages and planes of Guedels
classification. Examples of surgery that can by
performed at there anesthetic levels are given in
parentheses.
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Anxiety and Pain Control
  • General Anesthesia
  • Intravenous
  • Inhalational
  • Parenteral Sedation (Conscious Sedation)
  • Intravenous
  • Intramuscular
  • Submucosal
  • Enteral Sedation (Oral Sedation)
  • Nitrous Oxide Sedation

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Conscious Sedation
  • CNS depression not unconscious
  • amnesia
  • diminished ability to respond to command
  • diminished ability to remain unobstructed

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Big Risks
  • Obesity
  • Asthma/Pulmonary disease
  • Hypomobility of the mandible locked jaw
  • Extremes of age

12
Respiratory Difficulty
  • Airway obstruction
  • Respiratory arrest
  • Cardiac failure/acute pulmonary edema
  • Laryngospasm
  • Bronchospasm
  • asthma
  • allergic reaction

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Mortality Statistics
  • Death/serious disability in the office practice
    of OMS is 1gt800,000 anesthetics

14
Anesthetic Agents Commonly Used with a GA in the
OMS Environment
  • Benzodiazepine
  • Midazolam
  • Diazepam
  • Opioid
  • Meperidine
  • Fentanyl
  • Barbiturate
  • Sodium methohexital
  • Propofol
  • Ketamine
  • Inhalational agent
  • Isoflurane, Sevoflurane, Halothane

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Point to Remember
  • Any anesthetic/sedative/opioid regardless of
    route of administration can be a general
    anesthetic (can cause unconsciousness)

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Routes for Delivery of General Anesthetics
  • Intravenous (IV)
  • Inhalational

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Types of General Anesthetics
  • Induction agents
  • Induction agents usually administered IV
  • can be inhalational for those who do not tolerate
    IV access
  • Maintenance agents
  • Maintenance agents usually administered
    inhalationally or IV with bolus or continuous
    infusion technique

18
FIGURE 19-1 Structural formulas of anesthetic
drugs.
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General Anesthetics-Intravenous Agents
  • Primary role as induction agents
  • Maintenance with total intravenous anesthesia
  • Rapid redistribution
  • Shorter half lives
  • Environmental risk of inhalational agents
  • Rapid distribution to vessel rich tissues

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General Anesthetics-IntravenousAgents
  • High lipid solubility allows for rapid induction
  • When redistributed out of the brain, effect
    decreases
  • Advantages
  • Rapid and complete induction
  • Less CV depression

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General Anesthetics-Intravenous Agents
  • Benzodiazepines
  • Rarely used alone for general anesthesia
  • Cannot easily induce and maintain general
    anesthesia
  • Lack analgesic properties
  • Used for sedative and amnestic effects
  • Opioids
  • Decrease MAC of inhalation agents
  • Primarily used as adjuncts
  • Respiratory depression

23
General Anesthetics-Intravenous Agents
  • Ketamine
  • Duration of anesthesia 5-20 minutes
  • Metabolized in the liver
  • Increase in HR, BP, and CO due to sympathomimetic
    effects
  • Do not use in patients that will not tolerate
    above
  • Stimulates salivary secretions
  • Emergence phenomenon 5-30

24
General Anesthetics-Intravenous Agents
  • Ketamine
  • Dissociative anesthesia
  • Amnesia
  • Analgesia
  • Catalepsy
  • Thalamoneocortical and limbic systems
  • Protective reflexes maintained
  • NMDA antagonist

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General Anesthetics-Intravenous Agents
  • Ketamine (cont.)
  • Affects mu opioid receptors
  • Onset and peak plasma concentrations
  • 1 minute after IV
  • 5-15 minutes after IM
  • 30 minutes after oral
  • Distributional half life 11-16 minutes
  • Elimination half life 2-3 hours

26
General Anesthetics-Intravenous Agents
  • Methohexital
  • 2.5 times more potent than thiopental
  • Shorter duration of action
  • Sleep time 5-7 minutes
  • Mean elimination half life 3.9 hours
  • Biotransformed in the liver
  • Excitatory phenomena
  • Most often used GA in OMS

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General Anesthetics-Intravenous Agents
  • Propofol
  • Unrelated to other general anesthetics
  • Oil in water emulsion
  • Rapid onset
  • Distributional half life 1-8 minutes
  • Terminal elimination half life 4-24 hours
  • Extensive plasma and tissue protein binding

28
General Anesthetics-Intravenous Agents
  • Propofol (cont.)
  • Disappears from bloodstream more rapidly than
    thiopental
  • Decreases MAP 20-30
  • Apnea 22-45 after induction dose
  • Pain on injection
  • Less N V
  • Discard unused portion after 6 hours

29
Inhalational General Anesthetics
30
Inhalational Anesthetics Uptake and Distribution
  • Blood solubility- low, intermediate and high
  • Muscle has an affinity for anesthetic agents
    similar to that of blood
  • Lipids have a high affinity for anesthetic agents

31
MAC-Minimum Alveolar Concentration
  • The amount of anesthetic gas that will provide
    surgical anesthesia so that 50 of the subjects
    will not respond to the surgical incision

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Elimination and Metabolism of Anesthetic Gases
  • Same factors apply as uptake regarding gas
    principles
  • Most agents are biotransformed in the liver to
    some degree

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Pharmacologic Effects of Inhalation Agents
  • CV
  • Depression of myocardial contractility
  • Sensitivity to catecholamines
  • Concerns regarding bradycardia
  • Decrease of peripheral vascular resistance
  • Effect is hypotension
  • Respiration
  • Depression of medullary responses and respiration

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General Anesthetics-Inhalational Agents
  • Nitrous Oxide
  • MAC is 105
  • Blood/gas partition coefficient 0.47
  • With other Gas, concentration is 50-70
  • Little effect on respiration
  • Eliminated unchanged
  • Dysphoria and nausea with increased
    concentrations
  • Diffusion hypoxia
  • Can induce changed in folate and amino acid
    metabolism

37
General Anesthetics-Inhalational Agents
  • Sevoflurane
  • MAC 2.05
  • Mild airway irritant
  • Suitable for mask induction
  • Rare hepatotoxicity

38
Inhalational Agents
  • Desflurane
  • Blood gas partition coefficient 0.42
  • Irritating to airway
  • MAC 6
  • Required heated vaporizer
  • Expensive compared to other anesthetic gases
  • Reduces SVR and MAP, but increase in heart rate
    causing stable CO
  • Low risk of hepatotoxicity
  • Rapid depth and recovery

39
Inhalational Agents
  • Isoflurane (Forane)
  • Anesthesia of choice
  • Blood/gas partition coefficient 1.4 MAC 1.15
  • Pungent odor
  • Can provide muscle relaxation (high
    concentrations)
  • Dose dependent depression of myocardial
    contractility
  • Coronary vasodilation
  • CO maintained
  • Can use catecholamines
  • Respiratory depression
  • Neither nephrotoxic or hepatotoxic

40
Inhalational Agents
  • Halothane
  • Halogenated hydrocarbon
  • MAC is 0.75
  • Blood/gas partition coefficient 2.3
  • Poor analgesic properties
  • Incomplete muscle relaxation
  • Decreased MAP
  • Depressant effect on myocardial contractility

41
Inhalational Agents
  • Halothane (cont.)
  • Vasodilator
  • Depressant effect on respiration
  • Elimination-alveolar excretion and hepatic
    metabolism
  • Sensitizes heart to catecholamines
  • Associated with hepatoxicity
  • Malignant hyperthermia

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General Anesthesia in a Hospital Operating Room
or Outpatient Surgical Center
  • NPO
  • Intravenous access
  • Preanesthetic sedative
  • Induction agent (general anesthetic)
  • Muscle relaxant
  • Intubation
  • Maintenance of the anesthetic (general
    anesthetic)
  • Emergence
  • Recovery
  • Average time gt 30 minutes-several hours
  • Patient supine (prone)

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General Anesthetic in an Oral and Maxillofacial
Surgery Office
  • NPO
  • IV access
  • Preanesthetic sedative and analgesic
  • Induction agent/ maintenance agent
  • Emergence
  • Recovery
  • Average time 20-30 minutes
  • No intubation
  • Patient in semi recumbent position

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Differences between a Hospital GA and an Office GA
  • Hospital GA
  • Patient intubated
  • Skeletal muscle relaxant administered (at least
    for intubation)
  • Patient is supine
  • Inhalational agents used frequently
  • Longer anesthesia period
  • Office GA
  • No endotracheal tube
  • Patient is semi supine
  • No muscle relaxant
  • IV agents most frequently used
  • Anesthesia duration is less than 30 minutes

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