Esmolol and Anesthetic Requirement for Loss of Responsiveness During Propofol Anesthesia

The administration of esmolol decreases the propofol blood concentration, preventing movement after skin incision during propofol/morphine/nitrous oxide anesthesia. However, interaction with esmolol has not been tested when propofol is infused alone. Accordingly, we tested the hypothesis that esmolol decreases the propofol blood concentration, preventing response to command (CP50-awake) when propofol is infused alone in healthy patients presenting for minor surgery. With approval and consent, we studied 30 healthy patients, who were randomized to esmolol bolus (1 mg/kg) and then infusion (250 &mgr;g · kg−1 · min−1) or placebo. Five minutes later, a target-controlled infusion of propofol was commenced. Ten minutes later, responsiveness was assessed by a blinded observer. Oxygen saturation, heart rate, and noninvasive arterial blood pressure were recorded every 2 min. Arterial blood samples were taken at 5 and 10 min of propofol infusion for propofol assay. Results were analyzed with a generalized linear regression model:P <0.05 was considered statistically significant. The probability of response to command decreased with increasing propofol blood concentration (CP50-awake = 3.42 &mgr;g/mL). Esmolol did not alter the relative risk of response to command. We conclude that the previously observed effect of esmolol on propofol CP50 was not caused by an interaction between these two drugs.

[1]  P. White,et al.  The Use of Esmolol as an Alternative to Remifentanil During Desflurane Anesthesia for Fast-Track Outpatient Gynecologic Laparoscopic Surgery , 2001, Anesthesia and analgesia.

[2]  T. Kazama,et al.  Optimal propofol plasma concentration during upper gastrointestinal endoscopy in young, middle-aged, and elderly patients. , 2000, Anesthesiology.

[3]  J. Katz,et al.  The Onset Time of Rocuronium Is Slowed by Esmolol and Accelerated by Ephedrine , 2000, Anesthesia and analgesia.

[4]  M. Struys,et al.  Comparison of Plasma Compartment versus Two Methods for Effect Compartment–controlled Target-controlled Infusion for Propofol , 2000, Anesthesiology.

[5]  S L Shafer,et al.  The influence of age on propofol pharmacodynamics. , 1999, Anesthesiology.

[6]  P. Sebel,et al.  Esmolol Potentiates Reduction of Minimum Alveolar Isoflurane Concentration by Alfentanil , 1998, Anesthesia and analgesia.

[7]  J. Glen,et al.  The development of ‘Diprifusor’: a TCI system for propofol , 1998, Anaesthesia.

[8]  G N Kenny,et al.  Development of the technology for ‘Diprifusor’ TCI systems , 1998, Anaesthesia.

[9]  M R Petersen,et al.  Prevalence proportion ratios: estimation and hypothesis testing. , 1998, International journal of epidemiology.

[10]  S. Haidar,et al.  The Pharmacokinetics and Electroencephalogram Response of Remifentanil Alone and in Combination with Esmolol in the Rat , 1997, Pharmaceutical Research.

[11]  T. Kazama,et al.  Reduction by Fentanyl of the Cp50 Values of Propofol and Hemodynamic Responses to Various Noxious Stimuli , 1997, Anesthesiology.

[12]  P. Sebel,et al.  Esmolol Reduces Anesthetic Requirement for Skin Incision during Propofol/Nitrous Oxide/Morphine Anesthesia , 1997, Anesthesiology.

[13]  R. Dutton,et al.  Concentrations of Desflurane and Propofol That Suppress Response to Command in Humans , 1995, Anesthesia and analgesia.

[14]  D. Wiest Esmolol. A review of its therapeutic efficacy and pharmacokinetic characteristics. , 1995, Clinical pharmacokinetics.

[15]  A. McEwan,et al.  The Interaction of Fentanyl on the Cp50 of Propofol for Loss of Consciousness and Skin Incision , 1994, Anesthesiology.

[16]  A. Wood,et al.  β‐Receptor antagonism does not fully explain esmolol‐induced hypotension , 1994, Clinical pharmacology and therapeutics.

[17]  A. Burm,et al.  Pharmacodynamics of propofol in female patients. , 1992, Anesthesiology.

[18]  N. Morton,et al.  Pharmacokinetic model driven infusion of propofol in children. , 1991, British journal of anaesthesia.

[19]  C. Reilly,et al.  Ultra‐short‐acting beta‐blockade: A comparison with conventional beta‐blockade , 1985, Clinical pharmacology and therapeutics.

[20]  D. Lowenthal,et al.  Clinical pharmacology, pharmacodynamics and interactions with esmolol. , 1985, The American journal of cardiology.

[21]  H. Waal Propranolol-induced depression. , 1967, British medical journal.

[22]  P. Turner,et al.  The effect of propranolol on anxiety. , 1966, Lancet.

[23]  G. Plummer Improved method for the determination of propofol in blood by high-performance liquid chromatography with fluorescence detection. , 1987, Journal of chromatography.