Komai H, Lokuta A J
Department of Anesthesiology, University of Wisconsin, Madison 53792-3272, USA.
Anesthesiology. 1999 Mar;90(3):835-43. doi: 10.1097/00000542-199903000-00027.
Although various local anesthetics can cause histologic damage to skeletal muscle when injected intramuscularly, bupivacaine appears to have an exceptionally high rate of myotoxicity. Research has suggested that an effect of bupivacaine on sarcoplasmic reticulum Ca2+ release is involved in its myotoxicity, but direct evidence is lacking. Furthermore, it is not known whether the toxicity depends on the unique chemical characteristics of bupivacaine and whether the toxicity is found only in skeletal muscle.
The authors studied the effects of bupivacaine and the similarly lipid-soluble local anesthetic, tetracaine, on the Ca2+ release channel-ryanodine receptor of sarcoplasmic reticulum in swine skeletal and cardiac muscle. [3H]Ryanodine binding was used to measure the activity of the Ca2+ release channel-ryanodine receptors in microsomes of both muscles.
Bupivacaine enhanced (by two times at 5 mM) and inhibited (66% inhibition at 10 mM) [3H]ryanodine binding to skeletal muscle microsomes. In contrast, only inhibitory effects were observed with cardiac microsomes (about 3 mM for half-maximal inhibition). Tetracaine, which inhibits [3H]ryanodine binding to skeletal muscle microsomes, also inhibited [3H]ryanodine binding to cardiac muscle microsomes (half-maximal inhibition at 99 microM).
Bupivacaine's ability to enhance Ca2+ release channel-ryanodine receptor activity of skeletal muscle sarcoplasmic reticulum most likely contributes to the myotoxicity of this local anesthetic. Thus, the pronounced myotoxicity of bupivacaine may be the result of this specific effect on Ca2+ release channel-ryanodine receptor superimposed on a nonspecific action on lipid bilayers to increase the Ca2+ permeability of sarcoplasmic reticulum membranes, an effect shared by all local anesthetics. The specific action of tetracaine to inhibit Ca2+ release channel-ryanodine receptor activity may in part counterbalance the nonspecific action, resulting in moderate myotoxicity.
尽管各种局部麻醉剂在肌内注射时均可对骨骼肌造成组织学损伤,但布比卡因的肌毒性发生率似乎格外高。研究表明,布比卡因对肌浆网Ca2+释放的影响涉及其肌毒性,但缺乏直接证据。此外,尚不清楚这种毒性是否取决于布比卡因独特的化学特性,以及这种毒性是否仅在骨骼肌中出现。
作者研究了布比卡因和脂溶性类似的局部麻醉剂丁卡因对猪骨骼肌和心肌肌浆网Ca2+释放通道-兰尼碱受体的影响。采用[3H]兰尼碱结合法测定两种肌肉微粒体中Ca2+释放通道-兰尼碱受体的活性。
布比卡因增强(5 mM时增强两倍)并抑制(10 mM时抑制66%)[3H]兰尼碱与骨骼肌微粒体的结合。相比之下,在心肌微粒体中仅观察到抑制作用(半数最大抑制浓度约为3 mM)。抑制[3H]兰尼碱与骨骼肌微粒体结合的丁卡因,也抑制[3H]兰尼碱与心肌微粒体的结合(半数最大抑制浓度为99 microM)。
布比卡因增强骨骼肌肌浆网Ca2+释放通道-兰尼碱受体活性的能力很可能是这种局部麻醉剂肌毒性的原因。因此,布比卡因明显的肌毒性可能是这种对Ca2+释放通道-兰尼碱受体的特异性作用叠加在对脂质双层的非特异性作用上,从而增加肌浆网膜Ca2+通透性的结果,这是所有局部麻醉剂共有的作用。丁卡因抑制Ca2+释放通道-兰尼碱受体活性的特异性作用可能部分抵消非特异性作用,导致中度肌毒性。