• Biol. Pharm. Bull. · Jun 2002

    Clinical Trial

    Pharmacokinetics of propofol in elderly coronary artery bypass graft patients under total intravenous anesthesia.

    • Norifumi Morikawa, Kazushige Oishi, Masaharu Takeyama, and Takayuki Noguchi.
    • Department of Clinical Pharmacy, Oita Medical University, Japan. morikawa@oita-med.ac.jp
    • Biol. Pharm. Bull. 2002 Jun 1; 25 (6): 813-5.

    AbstractThe present paper investigates the pharmacokinetics of propofol in the plasma of two elderly patients operated on under total intravenous anesthesia using propofol. A 78-year-old (patient A) and a 76-year-old (patient B), both Japanese men with unstable angina pectoris, were operated on for coronary artery bypass grafts. For the induction of anesthesia, 1.5 mg/kg propofol was administered as a single bolus infusion, and anesthesia was maintained using the step-down infusion regimens of propofol. Propofol concentration in the plasma was measured by HPLC with a fluorescence detector. The simulation curves, following the two-compartment model, fitted well to the profiles of the individual data of propofol concentrations in the plasma. When 4 mg/kg/h of propofol was administered to both patients while maintaining anesthesia, propofol concentrations in the plasma were maintained at over 1.0 microg/ml. In patient A, the propofol concentration in the plasma was 140 ng/ml at 6 h after the end of the infusion. In patient B, the propofol concentrations in the plasma were 73 ng/ml at 6 h and 35 ng/ml at 12 h after the end of the infusion. The apparent distribution volumes of patients A and B were 1.43 and 1.62 l/kg, respectively. The half-lives of propofol in the plasma of patients A and B were estimated to be 13.3 and 17.4 min as the a phase, and 10.1 and 10.5 h as the beta phase, respectively. In elderly patients with cardiac surgery, the maintenance concentrations of propofol in the plasma were enough to maintain a concentration of 1.0 microg/ml, and the half-life may be longer than previously reported values in adult patients.

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