Johnson Ken B, Egan Talmage D, Kern Steven E, White Julia L, McJames Scott W, Syroid Noah, Whiddon Derek, Church Ty
Department of Anesthesiology, University of Utah School of Medicine, Salt Lake City, UT 84132, USA.
Anesthesiology. 2003 Aug;99(2):409-20. doi: 10.1097/00000542-200308000-00023.
Propofol is a common sedative hypnotic for the induction and maintenance of anesthesia. Clinicians typically moderate the dose of propofol or choose a different sedative hypnotic in the setting of severe intravascular volume depletion. Previous work has established that hemorrhagic shock influences both the pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics of propofol in the rat. To investigate this further, the authors studied the influence of hemorrhagic shock on the pharmacology of propofol in a swine isobaric hemorrhage model.
After approval from the Animal Care Committee, 16 swine were randomly assigned to control and shock groups. The shock group was bled to a mean arterial blood pressure of 50 mmHg over a 20-min period and held there by further blood removal until 30 ml/kg of blood was removed. Propofol 200 microg. kg(-1). min(-1) was infused for 10 min to both groups. Arterial samples (15 from each animal) were collected at frequent intervals until 180 min after the infusion began and analyzed to determine drug concentration. Pharmacokinetic parameters for each group were estimated using a three-compartment model. The electroencephalogram Bispectral Index Scale was used as a measure of drug effect. The pharmacodynamics were characterized using a sigmoid inhibitory maximal effect model.
The raw data demonstrated higher plasma propofol levels in the shock group. The pharmacokinetic analysis revealed slower intercompartmental clearances in the shock group. Hemorrhagic shock shifted the concentration effect relationship to the left, demonstrating a 2.7-fold decrease in the effect site concentration required to achieve 50% of the maximal effect in the Bispectral Index Scale.
Hemorrhagic shock altered the pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics of propofol. Changes in intercompartmental clearances and an increase in the potency of propofol suggest that less propofol would be required to achieve a desired drug effect during hemorrhagic shock.
丙泊酚是一种常用于诱导和维持麻醉的镇静催眠药。在严重血管内容量不足的情况下,临床医生通常会调整丙泊酚的剂量或选择不同的镇静催眠药。先前的研究已经证实,失血性休克会影响大鼠体内丙泊酚的药代动力学和药效学。为了进一步研究这一问题,作者在猪等压出血模型中研究了失血性休克对丙泊酚药理学的影响。
经动物护理委员会批准,将16头猪随机分为对照组和休克组。休克组在20分钟内失血至平均动脉血压为50 mmHg,并通过进一步放血维持该血压,直至放血30 ml/kg。两组均输注丙泊酚200 μg·kg⁻¹·min⁻¹,持续10分钟。在输注开始后每隔一段时间采集动脉血样(每只动物采集15份),直至180分钟,并进行分析以确定药物浓度。使用三室模型估计每组的药代动力学参数。脑电双频指数量表用作药物效应的指标。药效学采用S形抑制最大效应模型进行表征。
原始数据显示休克组血浆丙泊酚水平较高。药代动力学分析表明休克组的室间清除率较慢。失血性休克使浓度-效应关系向左移动,表明在脑电双频指数量表中达到最大效应的50%所需的效应部位浓度降低了2.7倍。
失血性休克改变了丙泊酚的药代动力学和药效学。室间清除率的变化以及丙泊酚效力的增加表明,在失血性休克期间达到所需药物效应所需的丙泊酚较少。