Pharmacokinetics Do Not Explain the Absence of an Anesthetic Effect of Perfluoropropane or Perfluoropentane

Abstract
Nd C,F, in the blood and brains of rats exposed to 0.65 ata of each drug. C3F8 and C5F12 blood/gas partition coefficients equaled 0.00125 ± 0.00037 (mean plusmn; SD, n = 9) and 0.00277 plusmn; 0.00082 (n = 4), and brain/gas partition coefficients equaled 0.0119 plusmn; 0.0002 (n = 4) and 0.0229 plusmn; 0.0055 (n = 7), respectively. As a fraction of the inspired value (Pa/PI), the partial pressures of C3F8 and C5F12 in blood (Pa) were 0.99 ±0.12 and 0.69 plusmn; 0.19, respectively, 30 min after administration. The increases in cerebral (Pb) partial pressures of both drugs paralleled the arterial increases (Pb/PI = 0.85 plusmn; 0.02, and 1.05 plusmn; 0.03, respectively at 30 min), with C3F8 reaching a plateau at 2 h of 96% ± 4% of the partial pressure of inspired gas. We conclude that failure of C3F8 and C5F12, to reach the brain does not account for the absence of an anesthetic effect of these compounds. Address correspondence and reprint requests to Ben S. Chortkoff, MD, Department of Anesthesia, University of California, San Francisco, 521 Parnassus Ave:, Room c-450, Box 0648, San Francisco, CA 94143–0648. This work was supported in part by the Anesthesia Research Foundation. Accepted for publication February 10, 1994. © 1994 International Anesthesia Research Society...

This publication has 0 references indexed in Scilit: