Canadian journal of anaesthesia = Journal canadien d'anesthésie
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The hypothesis that histamine H2 receptor blockade adversely affects neuromuscular function was tested, in vivo, in rats anaesthetised with urethane during mechanical pulmonary ventilation. Succinylcholine was administered as a bolus and constant-rate infusion to maintain 49.2% (+/- 1.5 SEM) twitch suppression in 19 rats. Cimetidine iv, 3.2, 7.5, 10, 17.8, 23.7, 31.6, or 56.2 mg.kg-1 was then administered in groups of two to three rats. ⋯ There was a good relationship between peak potentiation and serum cimetidine concentration with 50% potentiation occurring at 46.5 (+/- 4.6) micrograms.ml-1. Potentiation at steady-state was not correlated to serum cimetidine concentration but there was a weak relationship between reversal and serum cimetidine concentration. These results support reports from patients of an interaction between cimetidine and succinylcholine.
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Operative charts were reviewed in 86 patients with Charcot-Marie-Tooth disease, a condition characterized by chronic muscular denervation. A total of 161 surgical procedures was performed. ⋯ Succinylcholine and malignant hyperthermia triggering agents were used in 41 (48%) and 77 (90%) patients, respectively, without untoward effects. Contrary to previous reports, this survey supports the safe use of succinylcholine and MH triggering agents in this disease.
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The effects of dobutamine on diaphragmatic contractility were studied in 24 dogs anaesthetized with secobarbital and receiving mechanical lung ventilation. The phrenic nerves were stimulated supramaximally for two seconds with electrodes placed around the fifth and sixth cervical roots when the airway was closed at the level of FRC. The stimulating frequency ranged from 10 to 100 Hz. ⋯ The Edi was not altered by dobutamine infusion. This enhancement of Pdi by dobutamine was abolished by simultaneous infusion of nicardipine, a Ca-channel blocker, but was not affected by prostaglandin E1. These results suggest that dobutamine has a stimulating effect on canine diaphragmatic contraction, and this action may be related to the increased inward movement of extracellular calcium.