Crystal G J, Zhou X, Gurevicius J, Czinn E A, Salem M R, Alam S, Piotrowski A, Hu G
Department of Anesthesiology, Illinois Masonic Medical Center, Univeristy of Illinois College of Medicine, Chicago 60657, USA.
Anesthesiology. 2000 Apr;92(4):1103-13. doi: 10.1097/00000542-200004000-00029.
An extracorporeal system was used to investigate the direct coronary vasomotor effects of sevoflurane and desflurane in vivo. The role of the adenosine triphosphate-sensitive potassium channels (KATP channels) in these effects was evaluated.
Twenty-one open-chest, anesthetized (fentanyl-midazolam) dogs were studied. The left anterior descending coronary artery was perfused at controlled pressure (80 mmHg) with normal arterial blood or arterial blood equilibrated with either sevoflurane or desflurane. Series 1 (n = 16) was divided into two groups of equal size on the basis of whether sevoflurane (1.2, 2.4, and 4.8%) or desflurane (3.6, 7.2, and 14.4%) was studied. The concentrations for the anesthetics corresponded to 0.5, 1.0, and 2.0 minimum alveolar concentration (MAC), respectively. Coronary blood flow (CBF) was measured with an ultrasonic, transit-time transducer. Local coronary venous samples were obtained and used to evaluate changes in myocardial oxygen extraction (EO2). In series 2 (n = 5), changes in CBF by 1 MAC sevoflurane and desflurane were assessed before and during intracoronary infusion of the KATP channel inhibitor glibenclamide (100 microg/min).
Intracoronary sevoflurane and desflurane caused concentration-dependent increases in CBF (and decreases in EO2) that were comparable. Glibenclamide blunted significantly the anesthetic-induced increases in CBF.
Sevoflurane and desflurane have comparable coronary vasodilative effects in in situ canine hearts. The KATP channels play a prominent role in these effects. When compared with data obtained previously in the same model, the coronary vasodilative effects of sevoflurane and desflurane are similar to those of enflurane and halothane but considerably smaller than that of isoflurane.
使用体外系统研究七氟醚和地氟醚在体内对冠状动脉血管舒缩的直接作用。评估了三磷酸腺苷敏感性钾通道(KATP通道)在这些作用中的角色。
研究了21只开胸、麻醉(芬太尼-咪达唑仑)的犬。在控制压力(80 mmHg)下,用正常动脉血或与七氟醚或地氟醚平衡的动脉血灌注左前降支冠状动脉。系列1(n = 16)根据研究的是七氟醚(1.2%、2.4%和4.8%)还是地氟醚(3.6%、7.2%和14.4%)分为两组,每组大小相等。麻醉剂的浓度分别对应于0.5、1.0和2.0最低肺泡浓度(MAC)。用超声通过时间换能器测量冠状动脉血流量(CBF)。获取局部冠状静脉样本并用于评估心肌氧摄取(EO2)的变化。在系列2(n = 5)中,在冠状动脉内输注KATP通道抑制剂格列本脲(100 μg/min)之前和期间,评估1 MAC七氟醚和地氟醚引起的CBF变化。
冠状动脉内七氟醚和地氟醚引起CBF浓度依赖性增加(EO2降低),二者相当。格列本脲显著减弱了麻醉剂引起的CBF增加。
七氟醚和地氟醚在原位犬心脏中具有相当的冠状动脉舒张作用。KATP通道在这些作用中起重要作用。与先前在同一模型中获得的数据相比,七氟醚和地氟醚的冠状动脉舒张作用与恩氟醚和氟烷相似,但远小于异氟醚。