• Regional anesthesia · Sep 1996

    Clinical Trial

    Spinal clonidine fails to provide surgical anesthesia for transurethral resection of prostate. A dose-finding pilot study.

    • J M Malinovsky and J M Bernard.
    • Départment d'Anesthésie-Réanimation Chirugicale, Hôtel-Dieu, Nantes, France.
    • Reg Anesth. 1996 Sep 1;21(5):419-23.

    Background And ObjectivesThis study was designed to determine whether subarachnoid clonidine administration alone results in surgical anesthesia for transurethral resection of the prostate.MethodsBlood pressure, heart rate, sedation, and sensory and motor blocks were assessed in 12 patients before and after lumbar subarachnoid injection of increasing doses of clonidine (three patients each received 75, 150, 300, and 450 micrograms doses). General anesthesia was induced at the request of the patient or surgeon, if conditions were unsatisfactory.ResultsClonidine resulted in marked sedation within a mean of 19 minutes of spinal injection, and no motor block was observed. There was a 25% (range, 0-45%) reduction in mean arterial blood pressure. Although endoscopy was tolerated in all cases, general anesthesia was required when resection began, except in two patients who received 300 and 450 micrograms of clonidine, respectively. Postoperative analgesic requirements showed wide interindividual variability (mean, 6 hours; range 2-12 hours).ConclusionsSubarachnoid clonidine cannot be reliably used as the sole agent for spinal anesthesia, since general anesthesia is often required or deep sedation occurs. Increasing doses of clonidine do not prolong postoperative analgesia. Thus, clonidine could be used as a spinal analgesic but not as a spinal anesthetic.

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