Comparative cardiovascular and pulmonary effects of sedatives and anesthetic agents and anesthetic drug selection for the trauma patient

被引:14
作者
Haskins, Steve C. [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Calif Davis, Dept Surg & Radiol Sci, Sch Vet Med, Davis, CA 95616 USA
关键词
critical oxygen delivery; hypotension; inhalant anesthetic; injectable anesthetic; sedative; trauma;
D O I
10.1111/j.1476-4431.2006.00188.x
中图分类号
S85 [动物医学(兽医学)];
学科分类号
0906 ;
摘要
Objective: To integrate and compare the effects of tranquilizer/sedatives and anesthetic drugs on various parameters of cardiovascular function in normal dogs and in dogs stressed by hypovolemia, anemia, and endotoxemia, and to discuss the relative merits and appropriate precautions of anesthetic drugs with respect to specific patient physiologic complications. Data sources: Personal data and experiences in conjunction with veterinary and human clinical and research studies. Human and veterinary data synthesis: Drugs that produce calming, sedation, muscle relaxation, analgesia, and loss of consciousness have the potential to produce marked cardiorespiratory effects particularly in hemorrhaged, hypovolemic-traumatized animals. Acute but key cardiovascular components that are affected by sedative and anesthetic drugs include heart rate and rhythm, venous return (preload), systemic vascular resistance (afterload), and myocardial contractile (inotropic) and relaxation (lusitropic) properties. In addition, all sedative and anesthetic drugs alter or depress normal baroreceptor reflex activity, thereby inhibiting or eliminating the animal's normal physiologic response to decreases in arterial blood pressure and predisposing to tissue hypoperfusion, decreased oxygen delivery and oxygenation. Oxygen delivery needs to be adequate to meet the metabolic (oxygen) requirements of the patient. Decreases in oxygen delivery to tissues increases oxygen extraction, thereby maintaining tissue oxygenation (supply-independent oxygen consumption phase) until compensatory processes reach their limit and any further decrease in oxygen delivery causes a decrease in oxygen consumption (supply-dependent oxygen consumption phase). The critical oxygen delivery that defines the transition between these 2 phases is generally higher in the anesthetized state than in the awake state. The effect of anesthetics on critical oxygen delivery at comparable anesthetic dosages is pentobarbital=ketamine>alfentanil>etomidate=propofol>inhalational anesthetics. Anesthetics generally decrease oxygen consumption from the awake, baseline state; exceptions are ketamine and ether. Ketamine, however, increases oxygen delivery and oxygen extraction. Conclusions: The transition from the awake to the anesthetized state is a huge imposition on the physiology of animals and, therefore, should be accomplished with great care and proper vigilance. Rapid, 'crash' induction of anesthesia should be avoided in hypotension-prone animals and slow, prolonged induction should be avoided in animals with respiratory disorders. It is not recommended to implement an unfamiliar protocol in critical patients, even if it might be pharmacologically preferable. Familiarity with an anesthetic drug is a very important reason for its selection.
引用
收藏
页码:300 / 328
页数:29
相关论文
共 66 条
[1]  
[Anonymous], PAIN MANAGEMENT SMAL
[2]  
COPLAND VS, 1987, AM J VET RES, V48, P1626
[3]   CARDIOVASCULAR AND PULMONARY EFFECTS OF ATROPINE REVERSAL OF OXYMORPHONE-INDUCED BRADYCARDIA IN DOGS [J].
COPLAND, VS ;
HASKINS, SC ;
PATZ, JD .
VETERINARY SURGERY, 1992, 21 (05) :414-417
[4]   INFLUENCE OF PENTOBARBITAL ANESTHESIA ON CARDIOVASCULAR FUNCTION IN TRAINED DOGS [J].
COX, RH .
AMERICAN JOURNAL OF PHYSIOLOGY, 1972, 223 (03) :651-&
[5]  
DODAM JR, 1990, AM J VET RES, V51, P786
[6]   Pediatric blunt cardiac injury: Epidemiology, clinical features, and diagnosis [J].
Dowd, MD ;
Krug, S .
JOURNAL OF TRAUMA-INJURY INFECTION AND CRITICAL CARE, 1996, 40 (01) :61-67
[7]   Continuous infusion of ketamine in hypovolemic dogs anesthetized with desflurane [J].
Duque, MJC ;
Souza, AP ;
Nunes, N ;
Honsho, CS ;
Talieri, IC .
JOURNAL OF VETERINARY EMERGENCY AND CRITICAL CARE, 2005, 15 (02) :92-99
[8]  
FARVER TB, 1986, AM J VET RES, V47, P631
[9]   Effects of halothane, sevoflurane and propofol on left ventricular diastolic function in humans during spontaneous and mechanical ventilation [J].
Filipovic, M ;
Wang, J ;
Michaux, I ;
Hunziker, P ;
Skarvan, K ;
Seeberger, MD .
BRITISH JOURNAL OF ANAESTHESIA, 2005, 94 (02) :186-192
[10]   THE EFFECTS OF SEVOFLURANE, HALOTHANE, ENFLURANE, AND ISOFLURANE ON HEPATIC BLOOD-FLOW AND OXYGENATION IN CHRONICALLY INSTRUMENTED GREYHOUND DOGS [J].
FRINK, EJ ;
MORGAN, SE ;
COETZEE, A ;
CONZEN, PF ;
BROWN, BR .
ANESTHESIOLOGY, 1992, 76 (01) :85-90