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控制性低血压:药物选择指南

Controlled hypotension: a guide to drug choice.

作者信息

Degoute Christian-Serge

机构信息

Service d'Anesthésie-réanimation, Centre Hospitalier-Universitaire Lyon-Sud, Pierre-Bénite, France.

出版信息

Drugs. 2007;67(7):1053-76. doi: 10.2165/00003495-200767070-00007.

Abstract

For half a century, controlled hypotension has been used to reduce bleeding and the need for blood transfusions, and provide a satisfactory bloodless surgical field. It has been indicated in oromaxillofacial surgery (mandibular osteotomy, facial repair), endoscopic sinus or middle ear microsurgery, spinal surgery and other neurosurgery (aneurysm), major orthopaedic surgery (hip or knee replacement, spinal), prostatectomy, cardiovascular surgery and liver transplant surgery. Controlled hypotension is defined as a reduction of the systolic blood pressure to 80-90 mm Hg, a reduction of mean arterial pressure (MAP) to 50-65 mm Hg or a 30% reduction of baseline MAP. Pharmacological agents used for controlled hypotension include those agents that can be used successfully alone and those that are used adjunctively to limit dosage requirements and, therefore, the adverse effects of the other agents. Agents used successfully alone include inhalation anaesthetics, sodium nitroprusside, nitroglycerin, trimethaphan camsilate, alprostadil (prostaglandin E1), adenosine, remifentanil, and agents used in spinal anaesthesia. Agents that can be used alone or in combination include calcium channel antagonists (e.g. nicardipine), beta-adrenoceptor antagonists (beta-blockers) [e.g. propranolol, esmolol] and fenoldopam. Agents that are mainly used adjunctively include ACE inhibitors and clonidine. New agents and techniques have been recently evaluated for their ability to induce effective hypotension without impairing the perfusion of vital organs. This development has been aided by new knowledge on the physiology of peripheral microcirculatory regulation. Apart from the adverse effects of major hypotension on the perfusion of vital organs, potent hypotensive agents have their own adverse effects depending on their concentration, which can be reduced by adjuvant treatment. Care with use limits the major risks of these agents in controlled hypotension; risks that are generally less important than those of transfusion or alternatives to transfusion. New hypotensive drugs, such as fenoldopam, adenosine and alprostadil, are currently being evaluated; however, they have disadvantages and a high treatment cost that limits their development in this indication. New techniques of controlled hypotension subscribe to the use of the natural hypotensive effect of the anaesthetic drug with regard to the definition of the ideal hypotensive agent. It must be easy to administer, have a short onset time, an effect that disappears quickly when administration is discontinued, a rapid elimination without toxic metabolites, negligible effects on vital organs, and a predictable and dose-dependent effect. Inhalation agents (isoflurane, sevoflurane) provide the benefit of being hypnotic and hypotensive agents at clinical concentrations, and are used alone or in combination with adjuvant agents to limit tachycardia and rebound hypertension, for example, inhibitors of the autonomic nervous system (clonidine, beta-blockers) or ACE inhibitors. When they are used alone, inhalation anaesthetics require high concentrations for a significant reduction in bleeding that can lead to hepatic or renal injury. The greatest efficacy and ease-of-use to toxicity ratio is for techniques of anaesthesia that associate analgesia and hypotension at clinical concentrations without the need for potent hypotensive agents. The first and oldest technique is epidural anaesthesia, but depending on the surgery, it is not always appropriate. The most recent satisfactory technique is a combination treatment of remifentanil with either propofol or an inhalation agent (isoflurane, desflurane or sevoflurane) at clinical concentrations. In light of the current literature, and because of their safety and ease of use, these two techniques are preferred.

摘要

半个世纪以来,控制性低血压一直被用于减少出血和输血需求,并提供一个令人满意的无血手术视野。它已被应用于口腔颌面外科手术(下颌骨截骨术、面部修复)、内窥镜鼻窦或中耳显微手术、脊柱手术及其他神经外科手术(动脉瘤)、大型骨科手术(髋关节或膝关节置换、脊柱手术)、前列腺切除术、心血管手术和肝移植手术。控制性低血压定义为收缩压降至80 - 90 mmHg,平均动脉压(MAP)降至50 - 65 mmHg或较基础MAP降低30%。用于控制性低血压的药物包括可单独成功使用的药物以及用于辅助以限制剂量需求从而减少其他药物不良反应的药物。单独成功使用的药物包括吸入麻醉剂、硝普钠、硝酸甘油、樟磺咪芬、前列地尔(前列腺素E1)、腺苷、瑞芬太尼以及用于脊髓麻醉的药物。可单独使用或联合使用的药物包括钙通道拮抗剂(如尼卡地平)、β肾上腺素能受体拮抗剂(β受体阻滞剂)[如普萘洛尔、艾司洛尔]和非诺多泮。主要用于辅助的药物包括血管紧张素转换酶(ACE)抑制剂和可乐定。最近对新的药物和技术进行了评估,以确定它们在不损害重要器官灌注的情况下诱导有效低血压的能力。这一进展得益于外周微循环调节生理学的新知识。除了严重低血压对重要器官灌注的不良影响外,强效降压药根据其浓度也有自身的不良反应,可通过辅助治疗减轻。谨慎使用可限制这些药物在控制性低血压中的主要风险;这些风险通常比输血或输血替代方法的风险小。目前正在评估新的降压药物,如非诺多泮、腺苷和前列地尔;然而,它们存在缺点且治疗成本高,限制了其在该适应证中的发展。控制性低血压的新技术符合使用麻醉药物的自然降压作用来定义理想的降压药。它必须易于给药,起效时间短,停药后作用迅速消失,快速消除且无毒性代谢产物,对重要器官影响可忽略不计,以及具有可预测的剂量依赖性效应。吸入药物(异氟烷、七氟烷)在临床浓度下具有催眠和降压作用,可单独使用或与辅助药物联合使用以限制心动过速和反跳性高血压,例如自主神经系统抑制剂(可乐定、β受体阻滞剂)或ACE抑制剂。当单独使用时,吸入麻醉剂需要高浓度才能显著减少出血,这可能导致肝或肾损伤。对于在临床浓度下联合镇痛和降压且无需强效降压药的麻醉技术,其疗效最佳且易用性与毒性比最佳。最早且最古老的技术是硬膜外麻醉,但根据手术情况,它并不总是合适的。最新的令人满意的技术是瑞芬太尼与丙泊酚或吸入药物(异氟烷、地氟烷或七氟烷)在临床浓度下的联合治疗。根据当前文献,由于其安全性和易用性,这两种技术更受青睐。

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