Anesthesiology
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The Cp50 (minimal steady state plasma concentration of an intravenous analgesic/anesthetic required to prevent a somatic response in 50% of patients following skin incision) and the Cp50-BAR (minimal plasma concentration of an analgesic/anesthetic required to prevent either a somatic, hemodynamic, or autonomic response in 50% of patients following skin incision) have been recently proposed as a measure, like minimum alveolar concentration (MAC; and MAC-BAR), to establish the relative potency of intravenous analgesics. This study was conducted to establish the Cp50 for fentanyl. ⋯ Comparing these results with the previously published Cp50 of alfentanil, the potency of fentanyl relative to alfentanil is 1:58. Establishing the Cp50, once effect site equilibration has occurred, will allow pharmacodynamic comparisons between the opioids at equipotent concentrations.
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Comparative Study
Effects of general anesthetics on intercellular communications mediated by gap junctions between astrocytes in primary culture.
Astrocytes represent a major nonneuronal cell population in the central nervous system (CNS) and are actively involved in several brain functions. These cells are coupled by gap junctions (GJ) into a syncytial-like network resulting in cellular communication through ionic and metabolic exchange between adjacent astrocytes. Whether anesthetics affect astrocyte function is not known. In the present study, the effects of general anesthetics on GJ permeability were investigated in primary cultures of mouse striatal astrocytes. ⋯ These results indicate that general anesthetics differentially affect GJ permeability in cultured astrocytes. This uncoupling effect (closure of gap junctions) may contribute to the mechanisms of action of some anesthetic agents (primarily volatile anesthetics) at the level of the CNS by altering astrocyte communication.
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Neuromuscular blockade (NMB) is a frequent component of anesthetic techniques used during surgery in which monitoring of the nervous system is desirable. Because NMB should affect the evoked muscle response to transcranial magnetic stimulation (tcMMEP), their relationship in a primate model was characterized. ⋯ This study indicates that tcMMEP onset latency is not significantly affected by NMB if the degree of blockade in the muscles used for tcMMEP monitoring is not extreme (greater than 0.2 of baseline by m-response amplitude or a TOF ratio of 0.1 or greater). If monitoring of tcMMEP amplitude is desired, partial neuromuscular blockade may be acceptable. However, amplitude reduction may occur during partial NMB. Maintenance of a constant degree of NMB is suggested to minimize amplitude fluctuations.
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Letter Case Reports
Safe nasogastric tube placement in a patient with a basal skull fracture.