Interactions Between Mivacurium, Rocuronium, and Vecuronium During General Anesthesia
- 1 October 1996
- journal article
- Published by Wolters Kluwer Health in Anesthesia & Analgesia
- Vol. 83 (4) , 818-822
- https://doi.org/10.1213/00000539-199610000-00029
Abstract
This study was designed to examine the interactions between mivacurium and rocuronium or vecuronium when administered during a standardized anesthetic technique.Seventy healthy women undergoing abdominal hysterectomy procedures with a standardized thiopental-sufentanil-desflurane-nitrous oxide anesthetic technique were randomly assigned to one of seven treatment groups (10 patients each). After a tracheal intubating dose of vecuronium 100 micro gram/kg (Groups 1 and 2), rocuronium 600 micro gram/kg (Groups 3 and 4), or mivacurium 250 micro gram/kg (Groups 5, 6, and 7), patients received vecuronium, 25 micro gram/kg (Groups 1 and 6), rocuronium 150 micro gram/kg (Groups 3 and 7), or mivacurium 50 micro gram/kg (Groups 2, 4, and 5) for maintenance of neuromuscular blockade. Neuromuscular function was assessed using electromyography, with a train-of-four mode of stimulation at the wrist every 10 s. The clinical duration (time for T1 to return to 25% of baseline) of the maintenance dose of mivacurium was significantly longer after an intubating dose of rocuronium (40 +/- 8 min) and vecuronium (28 +/- 6 min) than after mivacurium (12 +/- 3 min). The clinical duration of maintenance doses of vecuronium (18 +/- 6 min) and rocuronium (13 +/- 2 min) were significantly shorter after an intubating dose of mivacurium than that after an intubating dose of vecuronium (30 +/- 5 min) or rocuronium (42 +/- 12 min), respectively. These data suggest that with consecutive administration of neuromuscular blocking drugs, the initial duration of action depends more on the kinetics of the first neuromuscular blocking drug than the subsequent drug. Thus, there appears to be no clinical advantage in using mivacurium for maintenance of neuromuscular blockade after initial administration of rocuronium or vecuronium. (Anesth Analg 1996;83:818-22)Keywords
This publication has 25 references indexed in Scilit:
- Synergism Between Atracurium and Mivacurium Compared with That Between Vecuronium and MivacuriumAnesthesia & Analgesia, 1994
- Interactions between mivacurium and atracuriumBritish Journal of Anaesthesia, 1994
- Neuromuscular Effects of Rocuronium Bromide and Mivacurium Chloride Administered Alone and in CombinationAnesthesiology, 1994
- Use of Mivacurium During Laparoscopic SurgeryAnesthesia & Analgesia, 1994
- ISOBOLOGRAPHIC AND DOSE-RESPONSE ANALYSIS OF THE INTERACTION BETWEEN PIPECURONIUM AND VECURONIUM †British Journal of Anaesthesia, 1993
- SYNERGISM BETWEEN ATRACURIUM AND VECURONIUM IN CHILDRENBritish Journal of Anaesthesia, 1993
- Accelerated Onset and Delayed Recovery of Neuromuscular Block Induced by Mivacurium Preceded by Pancuronium in ChildrenAnesthesia & Analgesia, 1993
- CLINICAL OBSERVATIONS ON THE NEUROMUSCULAR BLOCKING ACTION OF ORG 9426, A NEW STEROIDAL NON-DEPOLARIZING AGENTBritish Journal of Anaesthesia, 1990
- Interaction among Agents that Block End-plate Depolarization CompetitivelyAnesthesiology, 1985
- Quantitative Examination of the Interaction of Competitive Neuromuscular Blocking Agents on the Indirectly Elicited Muscle TwitchAnesthesiology, 1984