Effect of Rate of Injection on the Neuromuscular Block Produced by Vecuronium

A subparalytic dose (0.015 mg/kg) of vecuronium bromide was administered to matched pairs of patients undergoing routine dental surgery under enflurane-nitrous oxide/oxygen anesthesia either as a rapid bolus injection or as a slow infusion over 5 min. It was demonstrated that bolus injection produced peak plasma levels of drug considerably greater than those following slow infusion. Time to maximum block was more rapid following bolus (368 ± 84 [SD] sec) than by infusion (615 ± 88 sec), but the maximum block produced, either demonstrated by the reduction in amplitude of T1 from control or the T2:T4 ratio on the integrated electromyogram (Datex IEMG), was similar in each group irrespective of rate of injection, T1 and T4 referring to the first and last twitch in a train of four series.

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