Morita K, Otsuka F, Ogura T, Takeuchi M, Mizobuchi S, Yamauchi T, Makino H, Hirakawa M
Department of Anaesthesiology, Okayama University Medical School, Japan.
Br J Anaesth. 1999 Nov;83(5):734-9. doi: 10.1093/bja/83.5.734.
Sevoflurane anaesthesia is occasionally associated with polyuria, but the exact mechanism of this phenomenon has not been clarified. Aquaporin-2 (AQP2) is an arginine vasopressin (AVP)-regulated water channel protein localized to the apical region of renal collecting duct cells and is involved in the regulation of water permeability. To elucidate the effect of sevoflurane anaesthesia on urine concentration and AQP2, we have compared serum and urinary concentrations of AVP, AQP2 and osmolar changes during sevoflurane and propofol anaesthesia. General anaesthesia was induced with sevoflurane or propofol in 30 patients for a variety of major surgical procedures. Blood and urine samples were obtained from patients at baseline, and 90 and 180 min after induction of anaesthesia. AVP and AQP2 concentrations were measured by radioimmunoassay. In both groups, plasma and urinary concentrations of AVP increased similarly during anaesthesia although plasma osmolality remained unchanged. Although urinary AQP2 excretion in the propofol group increased together with changes in plasma and urinary AVP, urinary AQP2 was significantly lower at 90 min in the sevoflurane group. Urine osmolality in the sevoflurane group also showed a transient but significant decrease in parallel with suppression of AQP2. Our data suggest that sevoflurane anaesthesia transiently produced an impaired AQP2 response to an increase in intrinsic AVP.
七氟醚麻醉偶尔会伴有多尿,但这种现象的确切机制尚未阐明。水通道蛋白2(AQP2)是一种精氨酸血管加压素(AVP)调节的水通道蛋白,定位于肾集合管细胞的顶端区域,参与水通透性的调节。为了阐明七氟醚麻醉对尿液浓缩和AQP2的影响,我们比较了七氟醚和丙泊酚麻醉期间AVP、AQP2的血清和尿液浓度以及渗透压变化。30例患者因各种大手术接受七氟醚或丙泊酚诱导全身麻醉。在基线、麻醉诱导后90分钟和180分钟采集患者的血液和尿液样本。通过放射免疫测定法测量AVP和AQP2浓度。两组患者在麻醉期间血浆和尿液中AVP浓度的升高相似,尽管血浆渗透压保持不变。虽然丙泊酚组尿液中AQP2的排泄量随血浆和尿液中AVP的变化而增加,但七氟醚组在90分钟时尿液中AQP2的含量显著降低。七氟醚组的尿渗透压也与AQP2的抑制同时出现短暂但显著的下降。我们的数据表明,七氟醚麻醉会短暂导致AQP2对内在AVP增加的反应受损。