• Br J Anaesth · May 2003

    Randomized Controlled Trial Clinical Trial

    Propofol sparing effect of remifentanil using closed-loop anaesthesia.

    • S E Milne, G N C Kenny, and S Schraag.
    • University of Glasgow, Department of Anaesthesia, Glasgow Royal Infirmary, UK.
    • Br J Anaesth. 2003 May 1; 90 (5): 623-9.

    BackgroundGeneral anaesthesia is a balance between hypnosis and analgesia. We investigated whether an increase in remifentanil blood concentration would reduce the amount of propofol required to maintain a comparable level of anaesthesia in 60 patients undergoing ambulatory surgery.MethodsPatients were allocated randomly to receive remifentanil to a target blood concentration of 2 ng ml(-1) (low), 4 ng ml(-1) (medium), or 8 ng ml(-1) (high), administered by target-controlled infusion (TCI). After equilibration, propofol TCI was commenced in closed-loop control, with auditory evoked potentials (AEPex) as the input signal, aiming for an AEPex of 35. This was to ensure a comparable and unbiased level of anaesthesia in all patients.ResultsWe found a dose-dependent decrease in propofol requirements with increasing remifentanil concentrations. The mean (95% CI) propofol target blood concentration during adequate anaesthesia was 4.96 (3.85-6.01) micro g ml(-1) in the low, 3.46 (2.96-3.96) micro g ml(-1) in the medium, and 3.01 (2.20-3.38) micro g ml(-1) in the high group. There was no significant difference when recovery end points were achieved between the groups. Cardiovascular changes were moderate, but most pronounced in the high concentration group, with a decrease in heart rate of 21% compared with baseline. The mean calculated effect site propofol concentration at loss of consciousness was 2.08 (1.85-2.32) micro g ml(-1), and at recovery of consciousness was 1.85 (1.68-2.00) micro g ml(-1).ConclusionsThis study confirms a synergistic interaction between remifentanil and propofol during surgery, whereas the contribution of remifentanil in the absence of stimulation seems limited. In addition, our results suggest that the propofol effect site concentration provides a guide to the value at which the patient recovers consciousness.

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