Corks B C, Marchal F, Sundell H
Departments of Anesthesiology and Pediatrics, Vanderbilt University Hospital, Nashville, Tennessee 37232, USA.
Pediatr Pharmacol (New York). 1982;2(2):105-12.
This is a study of the laryngeal chemoreflex (LCR) and the trigeminal diving reflex (TDR) responses in the unanesthetized newborn lamb and of the changes in these responses produced by administration of intravenous bupivacaine. It was determined that both 1 mg and 10 mg bupivacaine significantly reduced the LCR. The responses to water and saline stimulation were similar after bupivacaine suggesting a complete blocking effect on the chemoreceptors. When the LCR was initiated by electrical stimulation of the cut superior laryngeal nerve the response was not reduced by bupivacaine indicating that the most likely site of action of bupivacaine is the chemoreceptors in the laryngeal mucosa. The trigeminal diving reflex was significantly reduced after 10 mg bupivacaine, whereas 1 mg was ineffective.