Journal of anesthesia
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The effects of propofol on the tone of guinea pig respiratory smooth muscle was studied both in vitro and in vivo. In vitro, the activity of propofol on tracheal smooth muscle was investigated using a force displacement transducer for isometric tension responses. Isoproterenol was used as the control. ⋯ Propofol (1-4.5 mg·kg-1, i.v.) exhibited neither relaxant nor constrictor effects. It is possible that the effects of propofol observed in vitro are due to nonspecific action, while the finding of no effect in vivo could be due to different tissue sensitivity to propofol, i.e., tracheal smooth muscle may be more responsive than bronchial smooth muscle. Propofol does not seem to have any deleterious effects on airway smooth muscle.
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Journal of anesthesia · Sep 1995
Spontaneous respiration should be avoided in frequency domain analysis of heart rate variability.
To determine whether spontaneous respiration is suitable for frequency domain analysis of heart rate (R-R interval) variability, we studied 15 volunteers (5 men and 10 women, aged 22-34 years) and evaluated the reproducibility of the power spectrum. Electrocardiograms were recorded for 5 min each with spontaneous and rate-controlled respiration (15 breaths·min-1), repeating the same protocol 1 week later. Fast Fourier transformation was performed using the digitized data of the R-R intervals. ⋯ Data were comparable for rate-controlled respiration. Since respiratory parameters strongly influenced the low- and the high-frequency R-R interval power spectra, spontaneous respiration should be avoided. A constant respiratory condition is required to interpret results of frequency domain analysis of R-R interval variability.
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Journal of anesthesia · Sep 1995
Effects of morphine on visceral nociception evoked by colorectal distension in rats: comparative examinations of electrophysiological and behavioral responses.
The purpose of this study was to compare the effects of intravenously administered morphine on electrophysiological and behavioral responses to colorectal distension (CRD) and to examine the influence of noxious stimuli applied to another part of the body (a laminectomy) on the visceromotor response to CRD. The effects of morphine (0.1-6.4 mg·kg-1) were examined in rate anesthetized with pentobarbital. Electrophysiological (n=16) and behavioral experiments (n=47) were done. ⋯ When morphine was administered, the visceromotor thresholds in both groups increased to a similar level. Behavioral and neurophysiological responses to CRD were suppressed in a similar fashion by morphine. Although laminectomy affected the threshold values of CRD for visceromotor responses, the laminectomy per se plays an insignificant role when adequate morphine is administered.
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Journal of anesthesia · Sep 1995
The effects of isoflurane and sevoflurane on the left ventricular end-systolic pressure-volume relation in dogs.
The influence of two inhalational anesthetics, isoflurane and sevoflurane, on the end-systolic pressure-volume relations (ESPVR) of the left ventricle (LV) in situ was investigated in open-chest dogs anesthetized with α-chloralose. The LV volume was measured by a conductance catheter while the LV pressure was measured by a tipmicromanometer. The end-systolic elastance (Ees) of the LV was calculated as the slope of ESPVR which was elicited when the inferior vena cava was transiently occluded. ⋯ Isoflurane and sevoflurane caused equivalent decreases in Ees of 23% and 16% at 1 MAC, and 48% and 41% at 2 MAC, respectively. Dobutamine 3 μg·kg-1·min-1 produced a simultaneous restoration of Ees and recovery of the cardiac output at 1 and 2 MAC of both isoflurane and sevoflurane. We thus conclude that the depressant effect of sevoflurane on cardiac contractility is almost identical to that of isoflurane in the dog, and they are both reversed by the use of a low dose of dobutamine.