Anesthesiology
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Although inhibition of nitric oxide synthase (NOS) has been reported to be antinociceptive and to reduce the threshold of general anesthesia, the mechanism of action is largely unknown. Specifically, the relation between the minimum alveolar concentration (MAC)-reducing effects of NOS inhibition and cyclic guanosine monophosphate (cGMP) concentrations in the brain has not been defined. To further characterize the effects of NOS inhibition, the authors studied the relation between the MAC of sevoflurane and the cGMP concentration of the brain after acute and chronic treatment with a neuronally selective NOS inhibitor, 7-nitroindazole (7-NI). ⋯ Although an acute selective inhibition of neuronal NOS decreases sevoflurane MAC and cerebellar cGMP concentrations in mice, there was a dissociation between the two parameters during long-term neuronal NOS inhibition. There may be cGMP-independent compensatory mechanisms that mediate nociception when NOS is chronically inhibited.
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Editorial Comment
Clinical simulation: technical novelty or innovation in education.