Wood M
Department of Anesthesiology, Vanderbilt University School of Medicine, Nashville, Tennessee.
Clin Pharmacokinet. 1991 Oct;21(4):285-307. doi: 10.2165/00003088-199121040-00005.
Patients receive on average 10 different drugs while in hospital; when fewer than 6 are administered the probability of an adverse drug interaction is about 5%, but when more than 15 are given the probability increases to over 40%. Patients presenting for anaesthesia and surgery are likely to receive multiple preoperative drug therapy and also many perioperative medications as part of their anaesthetic regimen. Thus, there is a considerable potential for interactions to occur in anaesthetic practice. Pharmacokinetic interactions occur when the administration of 1 drug alters the disposition of another, and hence alters the concentration of drug at the receptor site, leading to altered drug response. These changes in drug concentration at the receptor site may be produced by alteration of (a) drug absorption and uptake into the body, (b) drug distribution, (c) drug metabolism and (d) drug elimination or excretion by nonmetabolic routes. Interactions affecting the absorption of orally administered medications are often due to the indirect effect of 1 drug on gastric motility and emptying, which leads to reduced, delayed or variable systemic drug availability. Gastric emptying time before elective surgery is normal, but premedication with morphine, pethidine (meperidine) and anticholinergics all delay gastric emptying and hence drug absorption. Inhalational anaesthesia of short duration does not appear to affect drug absorption, although halothane anaesthetic used for longer periods produces a slight delay in gastric emptying. Volatile anaesthetics have been shown to delay the intramuscular absorption of ketamine. Anaesthetic agents may affect drug distribution, and peak concentrations of propranolol, for example, are 4 times higher during halothane anaesthesia in dogs, accompanied by a marked decrease in volume of distribution. This effect has been noted for other drugs, including thiopental and verapamil. Volatile anaesthetics also affect plasma protein binding, leading to displacement interactions in some cases. Volatile anaesthetics affect the metabolism of concomitantly administered drug (a) by altering the rate of delivery to the organ of clearance (e.g. decreasing hepatic blood flow) and (b) by altering the activity of drug metabolising enzymes. It is now well recognised that all the volatile anaesthetics currently in use inhibit the metabolism of a large variety of drugs, e.g. propranolol, lidocaine (lignocaine), fentanyl and pethidine. Other examples of interactions of clinical importance to anaesthesiologists include those between cimetidine and the local anaesthetics and benzodiazepines; inhibition of plasma cholinesterase by drugs such as ecothiopate; interactions between monoamine oxidase inhibitors and sympathomimetics or pethidine and between monoamine oxidase inhibitors and sympathomimetics or pethidine and between isoniazid and enflurane.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
患者住院期间平均会接受10种不同药物治疗;若用药少于6种,发生药物不良相互作用的概率约为5%,但用药超过15种时,概率会增至40%以上。接受麻醉和手术的患者术前可能会接受多种药物治疗,并且在围手术期还会使用许多作为麻醉方案一部分的药物。因此,麻醉实践中发生相互作用的可能性很大。药代动力学相互作用是指一种药物的使用改变了另一种药物的处置方式,从而改变了受体部位的药物浓度,导致药物反应改变。受体部位药物浓度的这些变化可能由以下因素改变产生:(a)药物吸收和进入体内的摄取过程;(b)药物分布;(c)药物代谢;(d)非代谢途径的药物消除或排泄。影响口服药物吸收的相互作用通常是由于一种药物对胃动力和排空的间接作用,这会导致全身药物可利用性降低、延迟或变化。择期手术前胃排空时间正常,但使用吗啡、哌替啶(度冷丁)和抗胆碱能药物进行术前用药均会延迟胃排空,从而延迟药物吸收。短时间吸入麻醉似乎不影响药物吸收,不过长时间使用氟烷麻醉会使胃排空稍有延迟。已证明挥发性麻醉药会延迟氯胺酮的肌肉注射吸收。麻醉剂可能会影响药物分布,例如,在犬类中,氟烷麻醉期间普萘洛尔的峰值浓度会高出4倍,同时分布容积会显著减小。其他药物(包括硫喷妥钠和维拉帕米)也有这种效应。挥发性麻醉药还会影响血浆蛋白结合,在某些情况下会导致置换相互作用。挥发性麻醉药通过改变药物向清除器官的输送速率(例如减少肝血流量)以及改变药物代谢酶的活性来影响同时使用药物的代谢。现已充分认识到,目前使用的所有挥发性麻醉药都会抑制多种药物的代谢,例如普萘洛尔、利多卡因(赛罗卡因)、芬太尼和哌替啶。对麻醉医生具有临床重要性的其他相互作用示例包括西咪替丁与局部麻醉药和苯二氮䓬类药物之间的相互作用;依可碘酯等药物对血浆胆碱酯酶的抑制作用;单胺氧化酶抑制剂与拟交感神经药或哌替啶之间的相互作用以及异烟肼与恩氟烷之间的相互作用。(摘要截选至400字)