Anesthesiology
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The large number and diversity of anesthetic agents were evident to investigators 80 years ago, and suggested a physicochemical theory of anesthesia. Meyer and Overton were the first to offer a quantitative relationship between a physicochemical property and potency of anesthetic agents. They also focused attention on the lipid phase as the site of anesthetic action. ⋯ The microtubule theory of Allison and Nunn has not accumulated supporting evidence comparable to the lipid theories. Contradictory evidence makes any evaluation of this theory speculative. Additionally, the interspecies and intracellular variability of microtubules raises questions of the relevance of many studies...
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Recovery from anesthesia was assessed in a controlled manner in 34 healthy student volunteers, using a psychomotor test battery 1 and 5 hours and a driving simulator 2, 4.5, and 7 hours after 3.5 minutes of anesthesia with halothane or enflurane combined with nitrous oxide and oxygen. Psychomotor performances remained significantly (P less than 0.05 to P less than 0.001) worse than in an unanesthetized control group for 5 hours after both halothane and enflurane. ⋯ It is concluded that after even brief periods of halothane or enflurane anesthesia patients should not drive or operate machinery for at least 7 hours. The magnitudes and durations of the residual effects of both agents on psychomotor performance were, however, less than those previously found after thiopental, methohexital, or diazepam.
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In dogs anesthetized with pentobarbital-chloralose, cardiac output and blood flows of four regional vascular beds (superior mesenteric, left renal, left circumflex coronary and left femoral) were continuously monitered with electromagnetic flowmeters. Arterial blood pressure and heart rate were also measured. Hypotension was induced with intravenous infusions of sodium nitroprusside and trimethaphan for 5-16 min to produce comparable reductions of mean arterial pressure (32 mm Hg or 26 per cent with nitroprusside and 37 mm Hg or 31 per cent with trimethaphan). ⋯ Nitroprusside affected femoral blood flow minimally, with a slight reduction of femoral vascular resistance. In contrast, trimethaphan increased femoral blood flow and markedly decreased femoral vascular resistance. Redistribution of cardiac output favoring the dilated skin and muscle vascular beds appears to be an important undesirable effect of trimethaphan.