Jinks Steven L, Dominguez Carmen L, Antognini Joseph F
Department of Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine, University of California School of Medicine, Davis 95616, USA.
Anesthesiology. 2005 Mar;102(3):624-32. doi: 10.1097/00000542-200503000-00022.
Individuals with spinal cord injury may undergo multiple surgical procedures; however, it is not clear how spinal cord injury affects anesthetic requirements and movement force under anesthesia during both acute and chronic stages of the injury.
The authors determined the isoflurane minimum alveolar concentration (MAC) necessary to block movement in response to supramaximal noxious stimulation, as well as tail-flick and hind paw withdrawal latencies, before and up to 28 days after thoracic spinal transection. Tail-flick and hind paw withdrawal latencies were measured in the awake state to test for the presence of spinal shock or hyperreflexia. The authors measured limb forces elicited by noxious mechanical stimulation of a paw or the tail at 28 days after transection. Limb force experiments were also conducted in other animals that received a reversible spinal conduction block by cooling the spinal cord at the level of the eighth thoracic vertebra.
A large decrease in MAC (to </= 40% of pretransection values) occurred after spinal transection, with partial recovery (to approximately 60% of control) at 14-28 days after transection. Awake tail-flick and hind paw withdrawal latencies were facilitated or unchanged, whereas reflex latencies under isoflurane were depressed or absent. However, at 80-90% of MAC, noxious stimulation of the hind paw elicited ipsilateral limb withdrawals in all animals. Hind limb forces were reduced (by >/= 90%) in both chronic and acute cold-block spinal animals.
The immobilizing potency of isoflurane increases substantially after spinal transection, despite the absence of a baseline motor depression, or "spinal shock." Therefore, isoflurane MAC is determined by a spinal depressant action, possibly counteracted by a supraspinal facilitatory action. The partial recovery in MAC at later time points suggests that neuronal plasticity after spinal cord injury influences anesthetic requirements.
脊髓损伤患者可能需要接受多次外科手术;然而,尚不清楚脊髓损伤在损伤的急性期和慢性期如何影响麻醉需求以及麻醉期间的运动力。
作者测定了在胸段脊髓横断前及横断后长达28天,为阻断对超强有害刺激的运动反应所需的异氟烷最低肺泡浓度(MAC),以及甩尾和后爪撤离潜伏期。在清醒状态下测量甩尾和后爪撤离潜伏期,以检测脊髓休克或反射亢进的存在。作者在横断后28天测量了对爪或尾巴进行有害机械刺激所引发的肢体力量。还在其他通过冷却第八胸椎水平脊髓而接受可逆性脊髓传导阻滞的动物中进行了肢体力量实验。
脊髓横断后MAC大幅下降(降至横断前值的≤40%),在横断后14 - 28天部分恢复(至对照值的约60%)。清醒时的甩尾和后爪撤离潜伏期延长或未改变,而异氟烷麻醉下的反射潜伏期缩短或消失。然而,在MAC的80 - 90%时,对后爪的有害刺激在所有动物中均引发同侧肢体撤离。慢性和急性冷阻断脊髓动物的后肢力量均降低(≥90%)。
尽管不存在基线运动抑制或“脊髓休克”,脊髓横断后异氟烷的制动效力仍大幅增加。因此,异氟烷MAC由脊髓抑制作用决定,可能被脊髓上的易化作用抵消。后期MAC的部分恢复表明脊髓损伤后的神经元可塑性影响麻醉需求。