GENERAL
ANESTHETICS
Anesthesia
• A better way to explain in three Stages…
• INDUCTION…the period of time from the onset of
administration to the development of anesthesia.
• MAINTENANCE… Sustained surgical anesthesia.
• RECOVERY…The time from discontinuation of
administration of anesthesia until consciousness and
physiological reflexes are regained.
HISTORY OF ANESTHESIA • • • • • • • • •
General anesthesia was absent until the mid-1800s.
Ether synthesized in 1540 by cordus
Ether used as anesthetic in 1842 by dr. Crawford W.Long
Ether publicized as anesthetic in 1846 by dr. William morton.
Ether is no longer used in modern practice, yet considered to
be the first “ideal” anesthetic
Chloroform used as anesthetic in 1853 by dr. John snow
Thiopental first used in 1934
Curare first used in 1942 - opened the “Age of anesthesia”
Anesthetics
Local General
anesthetics anaesthetics
What is General Anesthesia?
Do you think I should give him 50 or 100?
General Anaesthetics
The neurophysiologic state produced by general
anaesthetic is characterized by five primary
effects
O Unconsciousness
O Amnesia
O Analgesia
O Inhibition of autonomic reflexes
O Skeletal muscle relaxation
Classification of General
Anesthetics
Inhalation anesthetics
Intravenous anesthetics
INHALATION ANESTHETICS
Nitrous oxide (Gas)
Halothane
Enflurane
Volatile liquids
Isoflurane
Desflurane
Sevoflurane
Methoxyflurane
Ether, Cyclopropane, Chloroform
INTRAVENOUS ANESTHETICS
Barbiturates (Thiopental, Methohexital)
Benzodiazepines (Midazolam, Diazepam)
Opioid Analgesics (Morphine, Fentanyl,
Alfentanil, Remifentanil)
Propofol
Ketamine
Etomidate
IDEAL ANESTHETIC
Induce anesthesia smoothly and rapidly
Permit rapid recovery (rapidly reversible on
discontinuation)
Possess a wide range of safety
Devoid of adverse effects
But
No single anesthetic is capable of achieving all these goals
SIGNS AND STAGES OF ANESTHESIA
(GUEDEL’S SIGNS)
Stage I -Analgesia
Stage II-Excitement
Stage III-Surgical Anesthesia(4 planes).
Stage IV-Medullary Depression
Stages of General Anesthesia
Stage I: Disorientation, altered consciousness
Stage II: Excitatory stage, delirium, uncontrolled movement, irregular breathing. Goal
is to move through this stage as rapidly as possible.
Stage III: Surgical anesthesia; return of regular respiration.
Plane 1: “light” anesthesia
Plane 2: Loss of blink reflex, regular respiration . Surgical procedures can be
performed at this stage.
Plane 3: Deep anesthesia. Shallow breathing, assisted ventilation needed. Level
of anesthesia for painful surgeries
Plane 4: Diaphragmatic respiration only, assisted ventilation is required.
Cardiovascular impairment.
Stage IV: Too deep; essentially an overdose and represents anesthetic crisis. This is the
stage between respiratory arrest and death due to circulatory collapse.
INHALED
ANAESTHETICS
* INHALED ANESTHETIC
Pharmacokinetics
Taken up by gaseous exchange in alveoli
Alveoli Blood Compartments
An ideal anesthetic should have rapid
onset(induction) and effects should be readily
terminated
*PATHWAY FOR GENERAL ANESTHETICS
The rate at which a given concentration
of anesthetic in the brain is reached
depends on the;
Anesthetic concentration in the inspired air.
Solubility properties of anesthetic
Cardiac output
Pulmonary ventilation rate
Pulmonary blood flow
Alveolar venous partial pressure difference
UPTAKE AND DISTRIBUTION
A.Inspired concentration & alveolar ventilation
Uptake driving force alveolar conc
Two parameters controlled by anesthesiologist
1.Partial pressure(inspired conc)
2. alveolar ventilation
Alveolar conc FA approaches 1
Inspired airFI Faster
anesthesia
induction
The magnitude of effect varies according to blood-gas partition
co-effcient
Anesthetic concentration in the inspired air
Increases in the inspired anesthetic concentration
will increase the rate of induction of anesthesia
Advantage: for anesthetics with moderate blood solubility
(Enflurane, Isoflurane, Halothane). With a relatively slow
onset of action e.g. 3-4 % concentration of halothane
administered initially to increase the rate of induction.
This is reduced to 1-2 % for maintenance when adequate
anesthesia is achieved
* SOLUBILITY
Transfer of anesthetic from the lungs to the arterial blood
Blood:Gas partition coefficient:
Relative affinity of an anesthetic for the blood compared to air.
Useful index of solubility.
Anesthetic Partition Coefficient
Low (i.e. not very
Nitrous Oxide 0.47 soluble in blood)
Desflurane 0.42
Sevoflurane 0.69
Isoflurane 1.40 High (>10) (very
Enflurane 1.80 soluble in blood)
Halothane 2.30
Methoxyflurane 12
Airway Alveoli Blood Brain
Nitrous oxide with low solubility in blood reaches
high arterial tensions rapidly, which in turn results
in more rapid equilibrium with the brain and faster
induction of anesthesia
Airway Alveoli Blood Brain
It will take much longer time for blood partial pressure
of more soluble gas (halothane) to rise to the same
partial pressure as in the alveoli. Onset of anesthesia will be
slower with halothane than with nitrous oxide
Pulmonary blood flow
An increase in pulmonary blood flow
(increased cardiac output) slows the rate the
rise in arterial tension, particularly for those
anesthetics with moderate to high blood
solubility
Decrease in pulmonary flow has opposite effect
ARTERIOVENOUS CONCENTRATION
GRADIENT
Depends mainly on uptake of anesthetic by the tissues.
Depending on the rate and extent of tissue uptake
Venous blood returning to the lungs may contain significantly
less anesthetic than that present in blood.
Anesthetic entry into tissues is influenced by
Tissue : Blood partition coefficient
Rates of blood flow to tissues
Concentration gradients
During the induction phase of anesthesia
The tissues that exert greatest influence on the arterial –
venous anesthetic concentration gradient
are those which are highly perfused.
Include: brain, liver, Kidney and splanchnic bed.
ELIMINATION
Time to recovery from inhalation anesthetics depends on
Rate of elimination of anesthetic from brain
after the inspired concentration of anesthetic has been
decreased.
Factors affecting rate of recovery
Blood:gas partition coefficient
Pulmonary blood flow
Magnitude of ventilation
Solubility of anesthetic in the tissues
Duration of exposure
Inhaled anesthetics that are relatively insoluble in blood and brain
are eliminated at faster rates than more soluble anesthetics
e.g.Nitrous oxide, Desflurane, Sevoflurane leads to rapid recovery
from anesthetic effects
Halothane is twice soluble in brain
and five times more soluble in blood than
nitrous oxide, its elimination is more slowly and
recovery from anesthesia is less
rapid
Major Route of Elimination
Lungs
Liver
(metabolism by enzymes also contibute)
e.g. washout of halothane is more rapid than that of enflurane
Which would not be predicted by their respective solubilites.
However >40% of Halothane is metabolized while <10% of enflurane
Is metabolized during an average anesthetic procedure
Chloroform (Obsolete) causes hepatoxicity associates with
free radical formation in liver cells.
Methoxyflurane (halogenated ether) is now very rarely used
because about 50% is metabolized,
generating fluoride and oxalate, which
causes renal toxicity.
Enflurane and sevoflurane also generate fluoride
Isoflurane and Desflurane are least metabolized of
fluorinated anesthetics
Halothane is only volatile anesthetic in current use that
undergoes substantial metabolism. 30% converted
to bromide, chloride and trifluoroacetic acid and
other metabolites which may rarely cause liver
toxicity.
Extent of metabolism of inhaled anesthetics
Methoxyflurane > Halothane > Enflurane >
Sevoflurane > Isoflurane > Desflurane
> Nitrous Oxide
PHARMACODY
NAMICS
How general anesthetic work
It is not completely clear exactly how general anesthetics
work at a cellular level, but it is speculated that general
anesthetics affect:
the spinal cord (resulting in immobility),
the brain-stem reticular activating system
(resulting in unconsciousness) and
the cerebral cortex (seen as changes in electrical
activity on an electroencephalogram).
Inhaled anesthetics (and most of the
intravenous anesthetics) depress
spontaneous and evoked activity of neurons
in many regions of the brain.
TheMeyer-Overton correlation (or
principle) = There is a good correlation
between anesthetic potency and lipid
solubility.
Anesthetics interact with functional
membrane proteins particularly ion channels
Many anesthetics inhibit the function of
excitatory receptors such as: ionotropic
glutamate, acetylcholine or 5 HT receptors
As well as
enhance the function of inhibitory receptors such
as GABAA
NMDA= N-Methyl-D-Aspartate
Another type of channel that appears to be
specifically anesthetic sensitive is
Potassium channel (TREK)
When activated
reduces membrane excitability
Inhaled anesthetics have been reported to cause
membrane hyperpolarization (inhibitory action)
Via their activation of Ligand gated potassium
channels
Such channels are linked to several
neurotransmitters including
acetylcholine, dopamine, nor epinephrine and serotonin.
ORGAN SYSTEM
EFFECTS OF
INHALED
1.EFFECT ON CVS
Changes in Blood pressure
Nitrous oxide: causes an increased sympathetic
discharge and increase plasma
nor
adrenaline concentration ----
increase blood pressure
Halothane and other halogenated anesthetics
have opposite effect
Halothane and enflurane: reduces blood
pressure by a reduction in cardiac output.
Isoflurane, Desflurane,and Sevoflurane:
reduces blood pressure as a result of
endothelium mediated decrease in systemic
vascular resistance.
changes in heart rate:
Halothane ------- Bradycardia (Vagal stimulation )
Enflurane, Methoxyflurane and Sevoflurane --- little
effect.
Desflurane and Isoflurane: increases heart rate
(sympathetic activation)
Many anesthetics specially halogenated causes
cardiac dysrthymias --- ventricular extra systoles.
(Mechanism is not clear but may involve sensitization to adrenaline).
2. EFFECT ON RESPIRATORY
SYSTEM
With the exception of nitrous oxide
All inhaled anesthetic depress respiration
markedly and increase arterial partial pressure of
PaCO2
Bronchodilator action of inhaled anesthetic
Inhaled anesthetic tend to be
bronchodilators
Halothane: agent of choice in patients with
airway problems
(because of its bronchodilating action)
3.EFFECTS ON KIDNEY
All inhaled anesthetics
Decrease glomerular filtration rate
Increase renal vascular resistance and
Decrease effective renal plasma flow
4 EFFECTS ON LIVER
All inhaled anesthetic:
Decrease hepatic blood flow
Transient changes in LFT’s intraoperatively
TOXICITY
WITH
INHALED
ANESTHETICS
HEPATOTOXICITY
Potentially severe and life threatening hepatitis
(Halothane)
{Probability: 1:20,000-35,000}
Mechanism underlying is unclear but formation of
reactive metabolites (free radicals) ---- that either cause
Direct hepatocellular damage or
Initiate immune mediated responses (auto antibodies
against hepatic proteins in a trifluoroacetylated form)
NEPHROTOXICITY
Methoxyflurane --- limits its clinical use in
anesthesia.
Mechanism: caused by inorganic fluoride released
during metabolism of anesthetic.
Enflurane & Sevoflurane metabolism ----- formation of fluoride
ions ----- nephrotoxicity
Enflurane: changes in renal concentrating ability (prolonged use)
Sevoflurane: Compound A (Haloalkene) --- proximal tubular
necrosis (in test animals but not in humans)
MALIGNANT
HYPERTHERMIA
• It is a rare life-threatening condition that is
genetic in origin.
• The defect is typically located on the 19 th
chromosome.
• Malignant hyperpyrexia is a rare life-threatening
condition that is usually triggered by exposure to
certain drugs used for general anesthesia —
specifically the volatile anesthetic agents and
succinylcholine, a neuromuscular blocking agent.
SIGNS AND SYMPTOMS OF MALIGNANT
HYPERTHERMIA
• A very high temperature with more than 2C 0
rise in Temperature/ hour
• Tachycardia
• Acidosis
• Hypercapnia
• Rigid muscles
TREATMENT OF MALIGNANT HYPERTHERMIA
INTRAVENOUS
ANESTHETIC
• INTRAVENOUS
ANESTHETIC
• Ultra short acting barbiturates
• Benzodiazepines
• Opioid analgesic
• Propofol
• Etomidate
• Ketamine
ULTRA SHORT ACTING BARBITURATES
Thiopental/ Methohexital
Thiopental
• Very High lipid solubility
• Most commonly used for induction of anesthesia
Onset of action
• Rapidly crosses the blood brain barrier
• Plasma:Brain equilibrium occurs rapidly (in approx 1 min)
METABOLISM
• Slower than its redistribution
• Takes place primarily in liver
• Metabolized at a rate of 12-16% per hour
following a single dose.
Action is not terminated by metabolism
ACTIONS
On intravenous injection
Causes unconsciousness within about 20 seconds
This lasts for 5-10 minutes.
Dose dependent decrease in arterial blood
pressure, stroke volume, cardiac output.
(myocardial depressant effect)
Respiratory depression
(lowers the sensitivity of medullary respiratory center to CO2)
Cerebral metabolism and oxygen
utilization are decreased
Cerebral blood flow is also decreased.
This makes thiopental a much more
desirable
drug for use in patients with cerebral swelling
than the inhaled anesthetics,
since intracranial pressure and blood volume
are not increased.
BENZODIAZEPINES
• Diazepam
• Lorazepam
• Midazolam
• Used in anesthetic procedures
• Slower onset of CNS effect.
• Plateau of central depression appears to be below that of a true anesthetic state.
• Prolong the post anesthetic recovery period (undesirable)
• High incidence of anterograde amnesia
(amnesia for events occurring after the drug is administered)
MIDAZOLAM
• is frequently given I/V 15-60 min before induction of GA
(high incidence of amnesia >50%)
• Rapid onset
• Shorter elimination half life (2-4 hours)
• Steeper dose response curve
Uses of Benzodiazepines
Useful in anesthesia
As premedication
For Intraoperative sedation
As part of balanced anesthesia
Opioid analgesics
Morphine
Fentanyl
Sufentanil
Alfentanil
Remifentanil
Larger doses of opioid analgesics have
been used to achieve general anesthesia
FENTANYL
uses:
Preanesthetic
Adjunct to anesthetics
Fentanyl + Droperidol (Neuroleptanalgesia)
Fentanyl + Droperidol + Nitrous oxide ----
Neuroleptanesthesia
ALFENTANIL AND
REMIFENTANIL
Some times used for induction (rapid onset of action)
Rapid recovery
(useful in anesthesia regimens for ambulatory surgery )
PROPOFOL
Rapid induction
Rapid recovery
Patient feel better in immediate post
operative period
Anti-emetic effects
Used for both induction and maintenance
Component of balanced anesthesia
Popular as an anesthetic for use in day
surgery
Ketamine
(Related to Phencyclidine [PCP])
KETAMINE
Dissociative anesthesia
Characterized by
A condition characterized by
Catatonia/ Catalepsy
Lack of response to Amnesia
external stimuli
and by Muscular rigidity,
Analgesia
so that the limbsactual
Without remain
loss in
of consciousness
whatever position they are placed.
MECHANISM OF ACTION
Blockage of membrane effects of
excitatory neurotransmitter glutamic
acid at NMDA receptor subtype
Peak increase in these variables occur 2-4 min after I/V Inj
and then slowly decline to normal over the next 10-20 minutes
Increase in plasma epinephrine & Nor epinephrine occurs as
early as 2 min after i.v Ketamine & return to control levels
15 min later
Diazepam 0.2-0.3 mg/kg i.v. 5 min
Emergence Before admin of Ketamine
reduces the incidence
phenomena
Markedly increases cerebral blood flow,
oxygen consumption and intracranial pressure
USES
In outpatient anesthesia
In children undergoing painful procedures such as
dressing changes on burn.
In poor risk geriatric patients in shock because of
its cardio stimulant action
Etomidate
Etomidate
Used for
• Rapid Induction (with in seconds)
• Recovery with in 3-5 min (Rapid Redistribution)
• In balanced anesthesia
• Useful in patients with limited cardiovascular reserves,
e.g., elderly patients
Major advantage:
• Minimal cardiovascular and respiratory depressant
effect (Slight hypotension, low frequency of
apnea).
DISADVANTAGES:
• No analgesic effect
• Premedication with analgesic is required
• Nausea and vomiting
• Pain on injection
PRACTICAL APPROACH-
PROTOCOL
• Preoperative assesment
• preanaesthetic medication
• induction by thiopentone or propofol
• muscle relaxants
• intubation
• nitrous oxide +halogenated hydrocarbons
• withdraw & recovery