International journal of clinical pharmacology, therapy, and toxicology
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Int J Clin Pharmacol Ther Toxicol · Jan 1988
ReviewPropofol, the newest induction agent of anesthesia.
Propofol is a rapidly acting intravenous anesthetic agent which has many advantageous kinetic properties explaining its usefulness by bolus dose for induction of anesthesia or for administration by continuous intravenous infusion. It is rapidly distributed in the body with a half-life of only around 2 min and has an efficient hepatic and extrahepatic clearance (total body clearance may exceed liver blood flow). Premedication has little effect on the already good induction characteristics of propofol. ⋯ Propofol has proved to be a useful induction agent regardless of the age of patients, but in the elderly there appears to exist a marked sensitivity to it. Up to now there is no evidence that propofol in emulsion drug form can produce allergic or anaphylactoid reaction more often than other induction agents in use and no severe hematological nor visceral toxicity have been reported. In the present situation, when althesin is not marketed any more due to a high frequency of anaphylactoid reactions and etomidate will have a limited use in clinical practice because of its blocking effect on adrenocortical function, propofol offers an important alternative anesthetic agent to thiopentone.