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Pharmacology of Local Anesthetics. Donald H. Lambert. Nerve. Muscle. Compound action potential = sum of individual AP. Individual fibers blocked = decline in comp. AP. BH +. B + H +. H+. The Local Anesthetic Molecule.
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Pharmacology of Local Anesthetics Donald H. Lambert
Nerve Muscle
Compound action potential = sum of individual AP Individual fibers blocked = decline in comp. AP
BH+ B + H+
The Local Anesthetic Molecule • Local anesthetics consist of an aromatic ring and an amine, separated by a hydrocarbon chain Hydrophilic Hydrophobic • Two types of local anesthetics based on the hydrocarbon chain linkage • Esters have [-CO-O-] linkage • Amides have [-N-CO-] linkage
Amides v. Esters Parameter Amides Esters StabilityMetabolismAllergy Stable Unstable Liver/kidney Plasma Rare Less rare
AGENTS OF LOW POTENCYAND SHORT DURATION AGENT CHEMICAL RELATIVE ONSET DURATION CLASS POTENCY (MINUTES) PROCAINE ESTER 1 SLOW 60 - 90 CHLOROPROCAINE ESTER 1 FAST 30 - 60
AGENTS OF INTERMEDIATEPOTENCY AND DURATION AGENT CHEMICAL RELATIVE ONSET DURATION CLASS POTENCY (MINUTES) LIDOCAINE AMIDE 2 FAST 90 -200 MEPIVACAINE AMIDE 2 FAST 120 - 240 PRILOCAINE AMIDE 2 FAST 120 - 240
Lipid Solubility = Potency (and Duration) Lipid Bi-layer
Protein Binding = Duration Protein Na+ Channel Lipid Bi-layer
Effect of Dose on Onset, Duration, and Quality of Anesthesia • Onset time decreases from 12 min. to 5 min. • As dose increases • Adequacy increases from 40% to 100% • Duration increases from 100 to 260 min. • The more you inject thefaster it comes on, the betterthe block, the longer itlasts, and the greater the toxicity
Factors Influencing Local Anesthesia • pH of local anesthetic • Pregnancy • Site of injection
Adding sodium bicarbonate raises the pH of the local anesthetic solution
Median Nerve Block in Pregnant and Non-Pregnat Women J Butterworth, et al. Anesthesiology 1990;72:962-5
Collection of data of local anesthetic blood levels (mainly plasma concentrations) from various sources indicating the pattern of order of peak concentrations associated with various regional anesthetic blocks. Intercostal > caudal > epidural > brachial plexus > subcutaneous Rosenberg PH, Veering BT, Urmey WF: Reg Anesth Pain Med 2004; 29: 564-75
The Pharmacology of Local Anesthetics Important stuff for everyday practice! And for exams!!