Pagel P S, Kampine J P, Schmeling W T, Warltier D C
Department of Anesthesiology, Medical College of Wisconsin, Milwaukee 53226.
Anesthesiology. 1990 Dec;73(6):1148-57. doi: 10.1097/00000542-199012000-00013.
Assessment of the effects of nitrous oxide on myocardial contractile function in vivo has been complicated by lack of a reliable, easily quantified, load-independent index of contractility and by the presence of intact autonomic nervous system reflexes. Although several previous investigations in humans and experimental animals have demonstrated that nitrous oxide possesses direct negative inotropic effects, this conclusion remains controversial. This investigation reexamined the effect of nitrous oxide on myocardial contractile function when this agent was combined with baseline isoflurane or sufentanil anesthesia in chronically instrumented dogs. Contractility was evaluated with the use of the regional preload recruitable stroke work (PRSW)-end-diastolic segment length relationship, a method that provides an accurate, relatively afterload-independent assessment of inotropic state in conscious and anesthetized dogs. Because autonomic nervous system tone may influence the response of systemic hemodynamics to anesthesia in vivo, experiments were performed in the presence of pharmacologic blockade of the autonomic nervous system. Two groups of experiments, consisting of a total of 15 experiments, were performed with 12 dogs. Dogs, chronically instrumented for measurement of systemic hemodynamics, including left ventricular pressure and subendocardial segment length, were anesthetized with isoflurane or sufentanil. Thirty percent and 70% nitrous oxide were then administered in a random fashion. Left ventricular pressure-segment length loops were generated after 30 min of equilibration after each anesthetic intervention with the use of preload reduction by partial inferior vena caval constriction, and regional PRSW was calculated. Regional PRSW versus end-diastolic length slope reflected decreases in contractile state when nitrous oxide was added to isoflurane (50 +/- 5 for isoflurane alone to 28 +/- 2 erg.cm-2 x 10(-3).min-1 with 70% added nitrous oxide) or sufentanil (73 +/- 8 for sufentanil alone to 52 +/- 5 erg.cm-2 x 10(-3).mm-1 with 70% added nitrous oxide). Similar decreases in left ventricular positive dP/dt50 were observed as well, reflecting decreases in contractile function. The results further suggest that the degree of functional depression produced by nitrous oxide is nearly equal when isoflurane and sufentanil groups are compared. This study demonstrates that nitrous oxide possesses direct negative inotropic actions independent of changes in autonomic nervous system tone in the chronically instrumented dog.
一氧化二氮对体内心肌收缩功能影响的评估一直受到困扰,因为缺乏可靠、易于量化且与负荷无关的收缩性指标,以及存在完整的自主神经系统反射。尽管先前在人类和实验动物中的几项研究表明一氧化二氮具有直接的负性肌力作用,但这一结论仍存在争议。本研究重新审视了在长期植入仪器的犬中,当该药物与基线异氟烷或舒芬太尼麻醉联合使用时,一氧化二氮对心肌收缩功能的影响。使用局部可招募的前负荷搏功(PRSW)-舒张末期节段长度关系来评估收缩性,该方法可对清醒和麻醉犬的肌力状态进行准确、相对独立于后负荷的评估。由于自主神经系统张力可能会影响体内全身血流动力学对麻醉的反应,因此在自主神经系统药理学阻断的情况下进行了实验。用12只犬进行了两组实验,共15次实验。长期植入用于测量全身血流动力学(包括左心室压力和心内膜下节段长度)的犬,用异氟烷或舒芬太尼麻醉。然后随机给予30%和70%的一氧化二氮。在每次麻醉干预后30分钟平衡期后,通过部分下腔静脉缩窄降低前负荷,生成左心室压力-节段长度环,并计算局部PRSW。当一氧化二氮添加到异氟烷中时(单独使用异氟烷时为50±5,添加70%一氧化二氮时为28±2 erg·cm-2×10(-