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Barbiturate Anesthesia*

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reacts with the inhibitor 'GABA' receptor ... poor analgesia at sub-hypnotic levels. Effects on respiration. respiratory depressants ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Barbiturate Anesthesia*


1
Barbiturate Anesthesia
  • Pentobarbital Thiopental
  • Methohexital
  • Adapted from Muir, Hubbell, Skarda, Bednarski
    Veterinary Anesthesia, Third Edition

2
Effects on the CNS
  • reacts with the inhibitor GABA receptor
  • decreases cerebral blood flow, metabolism, and
    intracranial pressure
  • poor analgesia at sub-hypnotic levels

3
Effects on respiration
  • respiratory depressants
  • couphing, sneezing, hiccoughing and laryngospasm
    occur frequently may be related to excessive
    salivary secretion
  • laryngospasm common in cats
  • short apnea after IV bolus (relative overdose)

4
Effects on respiration
  • respiratory arrest can be treated by intubation
    and controlled ventilation
  • respiratory stimulant - doxapram

5
Effects on cardiovascular system
  • significant CV depression if rapid administration
    or large dose
  • arrhythmias such as VPCs and ventricular
    bigeminy
  • increase in both parasympathetic (bradycardias -
    heartblocks) and sympathetic tone (ventricular
    arrhythmias)

6
Effects on cardiovascular system
  • may be initial increase in blood pressure from
    tachcardia and increased peripheral vascular
    resistance
  • drop in BP and cardiac depression if patient
    already anesthetized
  • lower dose in sick, debilitated or depressed
    animals

7
Effects on cardiovascular system
  • concentrations greater than 2.5 may cause
    thrombophlebitis
  • tissue slough probably does not occur at 2.5
    concentration

8
GI effects
  • initial depression of GI motility then increase
    in both tone and motility
  • sometimes vomiting during induction if no
    premedication with tranquilizer

9
Kidney and liver effects
  • no effect on kidney unless large dose, then
    reduction in renal blood flow
  • single bolus dose has no effect on liver function
    but large dose may injure patients with liver
    disease

10
Effects on uterus and fetus
  • pentobarbital contraindicated
  • thiopental crosses the placenta within 45 seconds

11
Absorption, elimination and excretion
  • IV pentobarbital requires 5 -10 minutes for full
    effect
  • IV thiopental maximal effect in 30 seconds
  • are absorbed from the GI tract

12
Elimination
13
Elimination
  • redistribution to lean body tissues
  • repeated doses have cumulative effect
  • thin, heavily muscled animals (greyhounds) have
    prolonged recovery
  • acute tolerance rare but when it happens may be
    related to excitement or cardiac output
    distribution

14
Elimination
  • the amount of nonionized, nonprotein-bound drug
    is increased by acidosis
  • liver disease may slow recovery after large doses
  • hypothermia slows recovery

15
Pentobarbital (Nembutal)
  • dose 3-13 mg/lb depending on condition of the
    animal
  • inject 1/2 rapidly, the rest in small increments
  • administration of 50 glucose will lengthen
    effect
  • minimum lethal dose 23 mg/lb IV

16
Thiopental (Pentothal)
  • dose 3-8 mg/lb IV
  • discard solution after 3 days at room temp
  • subcutaneous injection may cause necrosis of skin
    (higher concentrations only) treat with saline
    and lidocaine

17
Thiopental (Pentothal)
  • 10 concentration used in horses
  • dog anesthesia in 20-60 seconds
  • ventricular bigeminy may occur
  • apnea more common after rapid injection
  • treat overdose with oxygen, controlled
    ventilation, fluids, alkalinizing solutions and
    diuretics

18
Methohexital (Brevane)
  • similar to thiopental except not cumulative
    because of rapid metabolism
  • dose 3 -7 mg/lb
  • recommended for sighthounds
  • respiratory depression and apnea are common
  • involuntary excitement and convulsions (treat
    with diazepam)

19
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