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Acta Anaesthesiol Scand · Feb 1987
Haemodynamic effects of intravenous bupivacaine during high thoracic epidural anaesthesia.
- A Sundberg, M Wattwil, and L Wiklund.
- Acta Anaesthesiol Scand. 1987 Feb 1;31(2):143-7.
AbstractAdministration of small doses of bupivacaine epidurally at the upper thoracic level will partially block the cardiac sympathetic nerves but not the sympathetic outflow via the adrenals. Local anaesthetics have direct systemic effects on the myocardium and the systemic circulation. The present study aimed to examine the effect of high thoracic epidural anaesthesia (TEA) in elderly patients, and to examine the effect of raising plasma bupivacaine concentrations in these patients, who had earlier had the sympathetic innervation of the heart blocked by thoracic epidural anaesthesia. Fifteen elderly patients scheduled for thoracotomy took part in the study. All received high thoracic epidural anaesthesia including the upper five thoracic dermatomes. When epidural block was established, ten patients received bupivacaine 3 mg/min intravenously for 20 min, while five patients received a corresponding volume of normal saline solution. After TEA was established, heart rate, mean arterial blood pressure and cardiac output decreased. When bupivacaine was given to these patients intravenously during the block, mean arterial blood pressure increased, while cardiac output decreased still more. The mechanisms behind these effects seem to be a direct constriction of the systemic blood vessels and a depressive effect on the myocardium, which was blocked from the influence of the cardiac sympathetic nerves by the high thoracic epidural block.
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