Acta anaesthesiologica Scandinavica
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Acta Anaesthesiol Scand · Jan 1977
The pressure-flow relations of the canine brain in acute mechanically induced arterial hypertension at different levels of cerebral blood flow.
Cerebral pressure-flow relations were studied in anaesthetized dogs during acute arterial hypertension, induced by compression of the thoracic aorta. In one group of animals steady state measurements were made with the radioactive gas elimination method. ⋯ At low or normal blood flows autoregulation was efficient up to pressures around 180-200 mmHg, while at higher flows the upper autoregulatory pressure limit was found at lower blood pressures. Above the autoregulatory limit-irrespective of the control flow level-there was a rise in blood flow and a decrease in cerebrovascular resistance.
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Acta Anaesthesiol Scand · Jan 1977
Comparative StudyHuman hepatic blood flow and its relation to systemic circulation during intravenous infusion of bupivacaine or etidocaine.
Fifteen healthy young volunteers were studied before and during an intravenous infusion of a local anaesthetic agent. Seven received bupivacaine and eight etidocaine in a dose rate of 2 mg/min over a period of 150 min. Variables of the central systemic circulation and also the hepatic blood flow were measured repeatedly. ⋯ In contrast, these three drugs had the same decreasing effect upon the splanchnic vascular resistance, which caused an almost identical increase in the estimated hepatic blood flow. The calculated vascular resistance in the systemic circulation, excluding the splanchnic, was unchanged during the infusion of etidocaine, while it decreased during the infusion of bupivacaine. Most of this discrepancy was due to the different plasma concentrations of the drugs.
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Acta Anaesthesiol Scand · Jan 1977
The relationship between disposition and duration of action of congeneric series of steroidal neuromuscular blocking agents.
The renal and hepatic elimination and biotransformation, as well as the relation between disposition and duration of action of pancuronium and two of its analogues, dacuronium and ORG.6368, have been investigated in the cat. In pharmacokinetic studies, appreciable amounts of the latter two compounds were found in the urine, bile and liver 8 h after their intravenous administration. Various proportions of the injected dose of the respective drugs were metabolized. ⋯ The intensity and duration of action of the neuromuscular blocking effect of the three compounds were studied after intravenous and "close" intraarterial injection. On the basis of these pharmacokinetic and neuromuscular studies, it was concluded that the short duration of action of ORG.6368 is due primarily to its early hepatic uptake. The possibility cannot be excluded, however, that differences in the kinetics of the drug action of ORG.6368 and the other two compounds also contributed significantly to the differences seen in the duration of action of these compounds.
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Acta Anaesthesiol Scand · Jan 1977
Glomerular filtration rate during halothane anaesthesia and epidural analgesia in combination with halothane anaesthesia.
Pre- and peroperative determination of glomerular filtration rate (GFR) was performed in nine patients operated during light halothane anaesthesia (group A) and in nine patients operated during epidural analgesia in combination with light halothane anaesthesia (group B). In group A, the mean GFR decreased insignificantly by 7% and the mean arterial blood pressure increased significantly by 10%. In group B, the mean GFR decreased significantly by 19% and the mean arterial blood pressure decreased significantly by 15%. It is suggested that the difference in change in GFR between the two groups was caused by differences in mean arterial blood pressure.
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Acta Anaesthesiol Scand · Jan 1977
Comparative StudyHypoxia-induced vasoconstriction in isolated perfused lungs exposed to injectable or inhalation anesthetics.
Investigations during the last two decades have revealed a tendency to inpaired pulmonary gas exchange in patients during general anesthesia. In the awake state, arterial hypoxemia is counteracted by a mechanism which tends to normalize the ventilation/perfusion ratio of the lungs by way of a hypoxia-induced vasoconstriction in poorly ventilated areas. This results in a redistribution of perfusion to more adequately ventilated lung regions. ⋯ The experiments showed that the response was unaffected by N2O and injectable anesthetics, while a reversible, dose-dependent damping effect was demonstrated for the volatile inhalation anesthetics, ether, halothane and methoxyflurance. The effect could be demonstrated at blood concentrations comparable to those used in clinical anesthesia, and it was not due to a general paralysis of the vascular smooth muscle. The findings might, at least in part, explain the occurrence of arterial hypoxemia during general inhalation anesthesia.