Articles: anesthetics.
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Comparative Study
Effects of peridural block: V. Properties, circulatory effects, and blood levels of etidocaine and lidocaine.
Ten healthy, unpremedicated, male volunteers, aged 21-33 years, were given 20 ml 1 per cent etidocaine with 5 mug/ml epinephrine for peridural analgesia via a catheter placed L2. On a different occasion they were given 20 ml 2 per cent lidocaine with 5 mug/ml epinephrine in the same manner. Initial onset of sensory analgesia to pin prick was faster for etidocaine (7 min) than for lidocaine (9 min). ⋯ Mean maximum arterial concentrations of lidocaine were 2.22 plus or minus 0.09 mug/ml (plasma) and 1.85 plus or minus mug/ml (whold blood), achieved at 24 plus or minus 2 min. No sign of central toxicity was observed with either drug, although subjects receiving lidocaine tended to sleep, which was not the case with etidocaine. Hematologic screening, blood chemistries, and urinalyses performed 24 hours before and after each study showed no abnormality.
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Two important measures may be derived from patient responses to a range of anesthetic doses. The AD50, corresponding to MAC, estimates the median anesthetic concentration--that dose where half the patients are anesthetized and half are not. The AD95 approaches the theoretical "minimum" anesthetic concentration by estimating the dose that anesthetizes 95 per cent of a patient population. ⋯ Recomputed from available data , the AD50's of nine inhaled anesthetics proved to be numerically identical to their MAC values. The AD95's of nine inhaled anesthetics proved to be numerically identical to their MAC values. The AD95's were 5 to 40 per cent greater than the AD50's.)Key workd: Potency, anesthetic, MAC, AD50, AD95; Pharmacology, dose-response curves.)