• The Laryngoscope · Aug 2012

    Differences in sensitivity to rocuronium among orbicularis oris muscles innervated by normal or damaged facial nerves and gastrocnemius muscle innervated by somatic nerve in rats: combined morphological and functional analyses.

    • Ru-Yuan Zhou, Jing Xu, Fang-Lu Chi, Lian-Hua Chen, and Shi-Tong Li.
    • Department of Anesthesiology, Eye, Ear, Nose, and Throat Hospital, Fudan University, Shanghai, China.
    • Laryngoscope. 2012 Aug 1;122(8):1831-7.

    Objectives/HypothesisTo evaluate mechanisms of discrepant responses to the nondepolarizing muscle relaxant rocuronium among normal and injured facial nerve-innervated orbicularis oris and tibial nerve-innervated gastrocnemius, and to provide information for the proper use of muscle relaxants to balance evoked electromyography (EEMG) monitoring and immobility in general anesthesia.Study DesignRandomized controlled study.MethodsRight-sided facial nerve injury was induced by crush axotomy in 18 Sprague-Dawley rats. At different rocuronium concentrations, muscular tension amplitude (MTA) was determined in vitro for normal and injured facial nerve-innervated orbicularis oris and gastrocnemius; the number of unsaturated acetylcholine receptors (AChRs) at end plates was determined by (125) I-α-bungarotoxin staining followed with gamma spectroscopy. The morphological composition of muscle fibers was determined by histological examination.ResultsFollowing rocuronium incubation, the percentage of MTA inhibition (MTAI%) of gastrocnemius was significantly higher than the corresponding values of orbicularis oris (P < .05), and the degree of saturation of AChR in gastrocnemius was significantly greater than that in orbicularis oris (P < .05). The baseline MTA and AChR density of injured-side orbicularis oris was significantly smaller than those of the normal side, whereas no significant difference was found regarding MTAI% and the degree of AChR saturation between the normal and injured side.ConclusionsThe affinity of AChR at end plates and different number of AChR per unit fiber cross-sectional area may be the mechanisms for differential sensitivities to neuromuscular blockers between facial nerve-innervated muscles and somatic nerve-innervated muscles. The lower EEMG responses in the impaired facial nerve-innervated muscles may result from the lower AChR density at end plates compared with the normal facial nerve-innervated muscles.Copyright © 2012 The American Laryngological, Rhinological, and Otological Society, Inc.

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