Expert opinion on investigational drugs
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Expert Opin Investig Drugs · Jun 1999
Levobupivacaine: a new safer long acting local anaesthetic agent.
The choice of local anaesthetic is influenced by several factors; it must provide effective anaesthesia and analgesia for the duration of the procedure and meet the expectations for post-operative pain management. Of primary concern is patient safety. Bupivacaine, currently the most widely used long acting local anaesthetic agent in both surgery and obstetrics, generally has a good safety record but its use has resulted in fatal cardiotoxicity, usually after accidental intravascular injection. ⋯ Nevertheless, levobupivacaine has been shown to have less effect on myocardial contractility and QTc prolongation, early signs of cardiotoxicity, than bupivacaine in healthy subjects. In clinical use levobupivacaine has been shown to be equally efficacious as bupivacaine at comparable doses and concentrations, and has been found to produce similar anaesthetic characteristics (onset, duration and density of block). As levobupivacaine now becomes commercially available, the database available with which to make efficacy and safety comparisons with other local anaesthetics will increase, and the true value of this new long acting local anaesthetic should become even more apparent.