welcome

Hi visitor,
Thank you for visiting my blog. I highly appreciate if you could leave a comment on the site in general or any particular post. It would be helpful for me and other followers.

Wednesday, June 29, 2011

Peripheral Nerve Stimulation


Peripheral Nerve Stimulation
Indications
Because of the variation in patient sensitivity to neuromuscular blocking agents, the neuromuscular function of all patients receiving intermediate- or long-acting neuromuscular blocking agents should be monitored. In addition, peripheral nerve stimulation is helpful in assessing paralysis during rapid-sequence inductions or during continuous infusions of short-acting agents. Furthermore, peripheral nerve stimulators can help locate nerves to be blocked by regional anesthesia.
Contraindications
There are no contraindications to neuromuscular monitoring, although certain sites may be precluded by the surgical procedure.
Techniques & Complications
A peripheral nerve stimulator delivers a current of variable frequency and amplitude to a pair of either ECG silver chloride pads or subcutaneous needles placed over a peripheral motor nerve. The evoked mechanical or electrical response of the innervated muscle is observed. Although electromyography provides a fast, accurate, and quantitative measure of neuromuscular transmission, visual or tactile observation of muscle contraction is usually relied upon in clinical practice. Ulnar nerve stimulation of the adductor pollicis muscle and facial nerve stimulation of the orbicularis oculi are most commonly monitored. Because it is the inhibition of the neuromuscular receptor that needs to be monitored, direct stimulation of muscle should be avoided by placing electrodes over the course of the nerve and not over the muscle itself. To deliver a supramaximal stimulation to the underlying nerve, peripheral nerve stimulators must be capable of generating at least a 50-mA current across a 1000- load. This current is uncomfortable for a conscious patient. Complications of nerve stimulation are limited to skin irritation and abrasion at the site of electrode attachment.

Saturday, June 25, 2011

Succinylcholine

Succinylcholine Should Be Avoided in Patients on Statin Therapy

Lee, Chingmuh M.D.

Author Information

David Geffen School of Medicine, University of California, Los Angeles, Harbor-UCLA Medical Center, Department of Anesthesiology, Torrance, California. chingleeucla@ucla.edu
Photograph: J. P. Rathmell.
Accepted for publication April 4, 2011. The author has, in the past, received sponsorship (Burroughs Wellcome & Company, Research Triangle Park, North Carolina, and Organon USA Inc., Orange, New Jersey) for laboratory and clinical studies on various neuromuscular blocking and reversal agents, including TAAC3 and sugammadex. He has no current or future financial interest in the topic of this article or any drugs mentioned.
This article has been selected for the Anesthesiology CME Program. Learning objectives and disclosure and ordering information can be found in the CME section at the front of this issue.
This Editorial View accompanies the following article: Turan A, Mendoza ML, Gupta S, You J, Gottlieb A, Chu W, Saager L, Sessler DI: Consequences of succinylcholine administration to patients using statins. Anesthesiology 2011; 115:28–35.
PARAPHRASING that an old soldier never dies, he just fades away, this author has written of succinylcholine, “A drug capable of generating so many controversies, surviving so many crises, so uniquely short acting and rapid in onset, and inexpensive, will not just die.”1 Indeed, succinylcholine still invites attention. In this issue of Anesthesiology, Turan et al. skillfully document that patients who were receiving statin medications for hypercholesterolemia had greater myoglobinemia and fasciculation after intravenous administration of 1.5 mg/kg succinylcholine than did similar patients not taking statin medications.2 Because the myoglobinemia remained well below its normal renal toxicity threshold, the authors suggested that the muscular injury probably is of limited clinical consequences. Nevertheless, this new finding should provoke a timely reassessment of the role of succinylcholine.
First of all, quantification of the succinylcholine-statin interaction is timely and important, considering the widespread, ever-increasing use of statin drugs in our health-conscious aging population and considering that both succinylcholine and the statin drugs frequently cause muscle damage.2
Turan et al. appropriately excluded from their study patients with American Society of Anesthesiologists status greater than III and those undergoing orthopedic and spinal surgeries and surgeries involving extensive muscle manipulations. They also excluded patients with hepatic, renal, or neuromuscular pathologies and those with chronic pain and risk of malignant hyperthermia.2 I have no qualms with a conclusion that absent other concerns, statin therapy per semay not necessarily contraindicate succinylcholine. I am, however, concerned with patients disqualified from this study, especially the vulnerable seniors with reduced functional reserves. Other unanswered questions remain because statins vary in their propensity to cause muscle damage, and patients vary in their existing muscle damage and in the succinylcholine interaction.
Indications for succinylcholine, or any drug, must be reevaluated periodically as more is learned about it. When they introduced succinylcholine to the United States 59 yr ago, Foldes et al.concluded in their 1952 publication that succinylcholine approximated most closely the definition of ideal relaxant.3 Upon reevaluation, however, Savarese and Kitz4 called for a major effort to replace succinylcholine with a “nondepolarizing succinylcholine,” and Savareseet al.5 immediately launched that effort in 1975. Lee classified the disadvantages of succinylcholine and noted that the list kept growing, whereas the drug's specific indications kept dwindling.6 Many short-acting compounds intended to replace succinylcholine, including rapacuronium and TAAC3, have proved promising. Unfortunately, none have succeeded.7–9 Vecuronium, rocuronium, and cisatracurium excelled on their own virtues and gained wide clinical acceptance, but they also failed to completely retire succinylcholine. Currently, the rocuronium-sugammadex combination beats succinylcholine in practically all outcome measures.8 Unfortunately, sugammadex is still unavailable in the United States. Another series of compounds, the CW002-related neuromuscular blocking agents, are promising but remain experimental.10,11 Meanwhile, the advantages and disadvantages of succinylcholine and its indications should be updated in light of the current study by Turan et al.
Economic reality requires all healthcare providers to be cost-conscious, and succinylcholine is indeed inexpensive. However, the cost of a drug must be evaluated in proper context. Mind the dollar and the penny will take care of itself. A Duke University study showed that American patients were willing to pay $33 out of pocket to avoid succinylcholine myalgia.12 This finding alone should go a long way toward paying for an intubation dose of a replacement nondepolarizing relaxant at less than $10. Besides myalgia, how much would an informed consumer pay to avoid sinus arrest, catecholamine release, the possibility of masseter spasm,13 chances of prolonged paralysis and malignant hyperthermia, fasciculation and increased oxygen consumption, and accelerated oxygen desaturation in the event of ventilatory failure and apnea?14 On balance, it appears penny-wise to deny patients an intubation dose of a nondepolarizing relaxant, which is also inexpensive relative to the statin drugs and other healthcare costs these patients face. After all, many inexpensive drugs have been removed from anesthesia practice; why not succinylcholine? In addition, the cost advantage of succinylcholine will be diluted if a nondepolarizing relaxant is administered soon afterward and if the cost is compared on a per minute basis. Admittedly, succinylcholine, at less than $2 an intubation dose, could be the only relaxant affordable in geographic areas of extreme low cost of living.
Are there indications for which succinylcholine is irreplaceable? One is obvious. In patients with unbreakable laryngospasm but no intravenous access (mostly pediatric), succinylcholine is uniquely advantageous. Its intramuscular injection could be lifesaving. However, I cannot tell how often this situation is unpreventable and how often an intravenous line cannot be established quickly at the first sign of trouble. In addition, succinylcholine remains popular in rapid-sequence intubation. This is significant because the full-stomach precaution is being applied quite liberally to many patients nowadays. Furthermore, for procedures of short duration, succinylcholine can provide profound relaxation to the last minute while still allowing rapid spontaneous recovery to occur. Finally, in the cannot-intubate-cannot-ventilate scenario, succinylcholine allows a chance for spontaneous breathing to return before serious harms ensue. These advantages of succinylcholine based on rapid recovery will diminish when sugammadex becomes available to encapsulate rocuronium or vecuronium in a “rescue reversal,”7 a situation for which the high cost of sugammadex is justifiable.
Compare succinylcholine with thiopental, another drug of great historic importance. They grew popular together and for decades were routinely found together on anesthesia carts and in stock rooms in large quantities. Both have benefitted millions and millions of patients for decades. Both feature rapid onset, speedy recovery from induction dose, cumulation on further use, and low cost. However, succinylcholine has more disadvantages and more serious side effects. After all, it is structurally, conformationally, and functionally two molecules of acetylcholine joined end on end, and therefore a nicotinic compound with predictable poor specificity as relaxant.1Amazingly, years after the obsolescence of thiopental, succinylcholine is still used electively in more than a few hospitals.
A Chinese proverb states, “Spare no virtue even if minor, do no harm even if trivial.” We owe this duty to our patients, as soon as the risk/benefit and the cost/benefit ratios so indicate. Considering the great number of patients receiving statin therapy and the prevalence of muscle injury, no additional harm of succinylcholine is trivial to the society. In conclusion, succinylcholine still has a few indications based on specific advantages. Its ultimate fate in anesthesia will not be clear until clinicians gain experience with sugammadex. Meanwhile, it should be avoided in patients receiving statin therapy, unless specifically indicated.
Chingmuh Lee, M.D.
Figure. ... advantag...
Figure. ... advantag...
Image Tools
David Geffen School of Medicine, University of California, Los Angeles, Harbor-UCLA Medical Center, Department of Anesthesiology, Torrance, California. chingleeucla@ucla.edu

Saturday, June 18, 2011

Alzheimer's Disease and Anesthesia


Alzheimer's Disease
Alzheimer's disease is a chronic neurodegenerative disorder. It is the most common cause of dementia in patients older than 65 years of age, and the fourth most common cause of death from disease in patients older than 65. Diffuse amyloid-rich senile plaques and neurofibrillary tangles are the hallmark pathologic findings. There are also changes in synapses and the activity of multiple major neurotransmitters, especially involving acetylcholine and central nervous system nicotinic receptors. Two types of Alzheimer's disease have been described: early onset and late onset. Early-onset Alzheimer's disease usually presents before age 60 and is thought to be due to missense mutations on up to three genes leading to an autosomal dominant mode of transmission. Late-onset Alzheimer's disease usually develops after age 60, and genetic transmission appears to play a relatively minor role in the risk of developing this disorder. With both forms of the disease, patients typically develop progressive cognitive impairment that can consist of problems with memory as well as apraxia, aphasia, and agnosia. Definitive diagnosis is usually made on postmortem examination, usually making premortem diagnosis of Alzheimer's disease one of exclusion. There is currently no cure for Alzheimer's disease, and treatment usually focuses on control of symptoms. Pharmacologic options include cholinesterase inhibitors, such as tacrine, donepezil, rivastigmine, and galantamine. Pharmacologic therapy should be combined with nonpharmacologic therapy including caregiver education and family support. Despite treatment, the prognosis for patients with Alzheimer's disease is poor.
Patients with Alzheimer's disease may present for a variety of surgical interventions that are common in the elderly population. Patients are often confused and sometimes uncooperative, making monitored anesthesia care or regional anesthesia challenging. However, there is probably no one single anesthesia technique or agent that is superior in this group of patients. Shorter acting sedative/hypnotic drugs, anesthetic agents, and narcotics are preferred since they may allow a more rapid return to baseline mental status. Finally, one should be aware of potential drug interactions, especially prolongation of the effect of succinylcholine and relative resistance to nondepolarizing muscle relaxants due
to the use of cholinesterase inhibitors.