• Anaesthesia · Oct 2003

    Pharmacokinetics of sevoflurane uptake into the brain and body.

    • C C Lu, C S Tsai, S T Ho, W Y Chen, C S Wong, J J Wang, O Y P Hu, and C Y Lin.
    • Department of Anaesthesiology, Tri-Service General Hospital/National Defense Medical Center, Room 8113, no. 161, Sec. 6, Minchuan E. Road, Taipei, Taiwan.
    • Anaesthesia. 2003 Oct 1;58(10):951-6.

    AbstractThe aim of this study was to investigate the pharmacokinetics of sevoflurane uptake into the brain and body by comparing sevoflurane concentrations in internal jugular-bulb blood (Jsev), arterial blood (Asev) and pulmonary arterial blood (PAsev) over a fixed inspired sevoflurane concentration. Ten patients (aged 51-73 years), undergoing coronary artery bypass grafting surgery were enrolled in this study. They were anaesthetised using a constant 3.5% inspired sevoflurane concentration (CIsev) during the first hour of anaesthesia. During constant volume-controlled ventilation, we measured CIsev and end-tidal sevoflurane (CEsev) using infrared analysis. The sevoflurane concentration in the blood was analysed using gas chromatography, and cardiac output was measured using an Opti-Q pulmonary artery catheter. We found that it took 40 min for the brain concentration to equilibrate with arterial blood (Asev). Both CIsev-CEsev and Asev-PAsev gradients persisted during the study period. There was no further uptake of sevoflurane into the brain after 40 min; however, there was near-constant uptake into the body.

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