Title: Ch. 3
1Injectable Anesthetics
2Injectable anesthetics
- Can produce unconsciousness when given alone
- In general, dont provide analgesia or muscle
relaxation - Administered IV, titration method
- Classes include
- Barbiturates
- Non-barbiturates
- Dissociatives
3Injectable anesthetics
- Barbiturates
- Ultra-short acting
- Short-acting
- Intermediate acting
- Long-acting
- Non-barbiturates/Hypnotics
- Propofol
- Etomidate
- Dissociatives
- Ketamine
- Tiletamine
4BARBITURATES
- ULTRA-SHORT ACTING
- SHORT ACTING
- INTERMEDIATE ACTING
- LONG ACTING
5Barbiturates
- Derivatives of barbituric acid
- Controlled
- No analgesia
- No reversal agent
6Classes of Barbiturates
- Based on duration of action
- Ultrashort
- Thiopental sodium, methohexital, and thiamylal
- Used in dogs, cats, horses
- Short
- Pentobarbital
- Used in laboratory animals
- May be used to treat status epilepticus and for
euthanasia
7Classes of Barbiturates
- Most intermediate and long acting barbiturates
are no longer used as anesthetics - Long-acting
- Phenobarbital used as a sedative
anticonvulsant
8Action of Barbiturates
- Mimics the inhibitory neurotransmitter GABA
- Depresses nerve impulses to cerebral cortex
resulting in CNS depression and loss of
consciousness
9Pharmacodynamics of Barbiturates
- Factors that affect potency, onset, and duration
of action - Ionization
- Non-polar (non-ionized) forms pass through the
cell membranes - Acidosis (blood pH lt7.4)
- Increases non-ionized form of the drug
- Increased drug amounts to brain
- Exaggerated patient response
- Lower doses should be used to anesthetize an
acidotic animal
10Pharmacodynamics of Barbiturates
- Protein binding
- Travels in blood bound to proteins
- Free (unbound) drug enters the brain
- So
- Hypoproteinemia results in more free drug
- More drug goes to the brain
- Normal drug dose may actually produce prolonged
unconsciousness or death
11Pharmacodynamics of Barbiturates
- Lipid solubility (partition coefficient)
- Is the tendency of the drug to dissolve in fats,
oils, and lipids - Affects the ability to penetrate the cell
membrane fatty layer
12Pharmacodynamics of Barbiturates
- High lipid solubility results in
ultrashort-acting drug - Passes into the brain cells more quicklyfaster
onset of action - High solubility results in rapid tissue
redistribution - Moderate solubility results in short-acting drug
- metabolized by the liver takes longer than
redistribution - Low lipid solubility results in long acting drug
- excreted primarily through the kidneys longest
process
13Redistribution How it works
- Ultrashort acting Thiopental sodium is given IV.
It then travels to the brain (vessel rich). It is
highly lipid soluble and crosses into brain cells
quickly. - Patient is now unconscious 30 seconds
- Once the levels in the brain are higher than in
the blood, the molecules will move back down the
concentration gradient - Drug re-enters circulation
- Redistributes to muscle, fat and other body
tissues - Patient begins to recover in 10-15 minutes
- Over the next couple of hours thiopental is
released from muscle and fat and eliminated from
the body by liver metabolism and excretion of
metabolites in the urine
14Barbiturate Redistribution
- Thiopentalultrashort-acting
- Released from muscle and fat and metabolized by
liver, excreted by kidneys - Continuous or repeated dosing may lead to full
muscle and fat and increased brain levels
prolonged recovery and possible death - Methohexitalultrashort-acting
- Released from muscle and fat but metabolized
faster - Muscle and fat dont get full so there is no
prolonged recovery with continuous or repeated
doses
15 Barbiturates
EFFECTS
ADVERSE EFFECTS
EFFECTS
ADVERSE EFFECTS
EFFECTS
ADVERSE EFFECTS
16Barbiturates
- Effects on sighthounds
- Effect on critically ill animals
- Effect on tissues
17Barbiturates
- Effects during induction/recovery
- Interaction with other drugs
18Thiopental
- Ultrashort-acting
- Small animals and horses
- duration of action10-15minutes
- Reconstitute with sterile water, normal saline,
or 5 dextrose in water - Shelf life 1 week refrigerated or 3 days at room
temperature - Dont use if a precipitate is present
- Sighthounds avoid use
19Methohexital
- Ultrashort-acting
- Can be useful on an unfasted animal
- Rapid induction and intubation
- Decreased risk of vomitus aspiration
- A powder that must be reconstituted (sterile
water) - Shelf life6 weeks without refrigeration
- More expensive than thiopental
- Can be used in sighthounds
- Excitement and seizures during induction and/or
recovery - Premedicate with tranquilizer
- Control postoperative seizures with diazepam IV
- Dont use in animals with epilepsy
20Pentobarbital
- Short acting
- Largely replaced by propofol
- Administered IP to rodents for general anesthesia
- Status epilepticus- treatment, persistent seizure
- Administer IV to stop seizure and produce heavy
sedation - Narrow margin of safety
- Euthanasia
21NON-BARBITURATES
22Propofol
- Ultrashort-acting, non-barbiturate anesthetic
- Most commonly used injectable anesthetic
- Give IV for anesthetic induction and short-term
maintenance - affects GABA receptors similar to barbiturates
- Other use
- IV bolus and CRI to treat status epilepticus in
dogs and cats
23Propofol
- Available in an egg lecithin/glycerin/soybean oil
aqueous solution - Milky white appearance
- Highly lipid soluble rapid onset, re-disribution,
and rapidly metabolized - Onset of action30-60 seconds
- Duration of action5-10 minutes
- Complete recovery in 20 min in dogs, 30 min in
cats
24Effects of Propofol
EFFECTS
ADVERSE EFFECTS
EFFECTS
ADVERSE EFFECTS
25Effects of Propofol
EFFECTS
ADVERSE EFFECTS
EFFECTS
26Other Effects of Propofol
- Some dogs may exhibit muscle twitching during
induction - Safe in animals with liver or kidney disease
because of its rapid metabolism
27Use of Propofol
- IV slowly, give ¼ dose every 30 seconds, but
dont give too slowly because it might cause
excitement - IM administration produces mild sedation and
ataxia only - Highly protein bound
- Dont use in hypoproteinemic animals
28Propofol Handling and Storage
- Poor storage characteristics
- Egg lecithin, glycerol, and soybean oil support
bacterial growth - Use aseptic technique- always write time and date
on bottle - Discard unused drug within 6 hours of opening
- May keep in refrigerator up to 24 hours
- Now there is propofol-28
- Lasts up to 28 days
29Etomidate
- Noncontrolled, ultra short acting nonbarbiturate,
sedative-hypnotic - Minimal effects on the cardiovascular and
respiratory systems - Expensive
30Etomidate Mode of Action
- Similar to barbiturates and propofol
- Increased GABA inhibitory action- hypnosis with a
little analgesia - Wide margin of safety
31 Effects of Etomidate
EFFECTS
ADVERSE EFFECTS
EFFECTS
ADVERSE EFFECTS
32Effects of Etomidate
EFFECTS
ADVERSE EFFECTS
EFFECTS
33Adverse Effects of Etomidate
- Painful IV injection
- Perivascular sterile abscesses
- Hemolysis with rapid administration (cats)
- Nausea, vomiting, involuntary excitement during
induction and recovery
34Guaifenesin (GG)
- Noncontrolled muscle relaxant
- Common use in large animals
- Muscle relaxation
- Facilitate intubation
- Ease induction and recovery
- Not an anesthetic or an analgesic
- Mode of action is not understood- blocks nerve
impulses to the CNS
35Effects of Guaifenesin
EFFECTS
EFFECTS
EFFECTS
EFFECTS
36Adverse Effects of Guaifenesin
- Few adverse effects at therapeutic doses
- Overdose
- Muscle rigidity
- Apneustic respiration
- Perivascular tissue irritation
37Use of Guaifenesin
- Triple drip GG, ketamine, xylazine
- Used in horses
- Not a sedative or analgesic
- Must pre-medicate
- Alpha-2s or acepromazine
- May cause excitement if not
- Increased risk of side effects if not
38DISSOCIATIVES
39Mode of action
- Disrupts nerve transmission in some brain
sections and has selective stimulation in other
parts of the brain - Decreases windup through NMDA inhibition
(N-methyl-D-aspartate) - Windup is exaggerated response to low-intensity
pain stimuli that results in worsening of post op
pain
40Dissociative Anesthetics
- Ketamine hydrochloride
- Derivative of Phencyclidine PCP
- Mostly used to compliment other drugs such as
Tranquilizers and opioids to induce general
anesthesia - Subanesthetic dose can be used as CRI for
analgesia
41Dissociative Anesthetics
- Tiletamine hydrochloride
- Combined with benzodiazepine zolazepam (Telazol
) - Tiletamine is a controlled substance
- No reversal for Telazol
- Provides limited somatic analgesia
42Dissociative Effects
EFFECTS
ADVERSE EFFECTS
EFFECTS
ADVERSE EFFECTS
43Dissociative Effects
EFFECTS
ADVERSE EFFECTS
EFFECTS
ADVERSE EFFECTS
44Dissociative Anesthetic Trancelike State
45Other Adverse Effects of Dissociatives
- Pain after IM injection due to tissue irritation
- Increased intracranial and intraocular pressure
46Ketamine
- Increased dose prolongs duration but doesnt
increase anesthetic effect - Duration of effect 20-30 minutes
- All dissociatives are either metabolized in the
liver or excreted unchanged in the urine - Avoid use in animals with liver or kidney disease
47Ketamine
- Approved for use in cats and subhuman primates
- Also used in dogs, birds, horses, and exotic
species - Administer IV or IM or orally (cats)
- Elimination
- Hepatic metabolismdogs
- Renal metabolismcats
48Ketamine and Diazepam Combination
- IV induction in dogs and cats
- Equal volumes of diazepam and ketamine
- Can be mixed in one syringe
- Watch for possible precipitate
- Alternative combination for IM injection
midazolam and ketamine - Minimal cardiac depression
- Superior recovery and some analgesia
49Tiletamine
- Similar to ketamine
- Sold only in combination with zolazepam
(Telazol) - Telazolsold as a powder to reconstitute
- Stable for 4 days at room temperature, or 14 days
if refrigerated - A class III drug
- Possible long and difficult recoveries
- Tachycardia, and cardiac arrhythmias
- Increased salivation
- Avoid in patients with ASA P3 rating
50Advantages of Telazol (as compared to Ketamine)
- Decreased apneustic respiratory response
- Can be administered SC, IM, or IV