Ventilatory and Mental Effects of Alfentanil and Fentanyl

Abstract
Forty healthy, young volunteers received intravenously, in a double-blind and random fashion, 7.5 or 15 micrograms/kg of alfentanil, 1.5 or 3 micrograms/kg of fentanyl, or saline. The ventilatory response to CO2 was measured before and at 4, 20, 30, 50, 80, and 120 min post-treatment. Mental and psychomotor functions were measured before and at 10, 40, 100, 130, and 180 min post-treatment. Low and high-dose fentanyl caused significant respiratory depression up to 30 and 80 min post-treatment, respectively, while there was no depression with low-dose alfentanil and only at 4 min with high-dose alfentanil. The fentanyl to alfentanil potency ratio for respiratory depression was 13:1. High-dose fentanyl caused more intense and prolonged mental effects than other treatments. Neither drug affected learning or recall, although high-dose fentanyl impaired motor activity. Nausea and vomiting rates were similar between high-dose alfentanil and low-dose fentanyl.

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