Tetanus-induced Changes in Apparent Recovery after Bolus Doses of Atracurium or Vecuronium

Abstract
The current study evaluated the duration and magnitude of post-tetanic effects in 56 patients recovering from a bolus dose of nondepolarizing relaxant to assess the impact of tetanus on monitoring in a common clinical setting. After induction of general anesthesia (thiopental, fentanyl, oxygen, nitrous oxide, and isoflurane), a baseline response to train-of-four (TOF) stimulation was recorded using an adductor pollicis force transducer, and the ratio of the fourth response (T4) to the first (T1) was calculated. Patients then received a bolus dose of either atracurium 0.50 mg.kg-1 (n = 28) or vecuronium 0.10 mg.kg-1 (n = 28). TOF was recorded at 12-s intervals between 25% and 75% recovery of T1 (time25-75%, first data set); then, block was reestablished with the same agent (atracurium 0.10 or vecuronium 0.02 mg.kg-1), and monitoring of time25-75% was repeated (second data set). Subjects were randomized such that none, one, or both sets had TOF monitoring interrupted by a 5-s, 50-Hz tetanic stimulus at 50% recovery (TET). For each drug, 7 patients were assigned to each of the four possible sequences: no tetanus (NOTET) set followed by NOTET set; NOTET-TET; TET-NOTET; and TET-TET. After either drug, the TET data sets demonstrated significant acceleration of recovery of T1 from 50% to 75% (time50-75%) of its baseline height (P less than 0.05 by paired t test). After atracurium, time50-75% was shortened by the tetanic stimulation from a control of 6.3 +/- 1.1 to 5.0 +/- 1.3 min (P less than 0.05).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)

This publication has 0 references indexed in Scilit: