Reduced Narcotic Requirement by Clonidine with Improved Hemodynamic and Adrenergic Stability in Patients Undergoing Coronary Bypass Surgery
Open Access
- 1 July 1987
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wolters Kluwer Health in Anesthesiology
- Vol. 67 (1) , 11-19
- https://doi.org/10.1097/00000542-198707000-00003
Abstract
The authors examined the effect of clonidine, a preferential alpha2-adrenergic agonist, upon narcotic requirements, hemodynamics, and adrenergic responses during the perioperative period in patients undergoing CABG surgery. Anesthesia was provided by sufentanil supplemented with isoflurane, sodium nitroprusside was given as needed for hemodynamic control. Ten patients received oral clonidine preoperatively at the time of premedication, and again intraoperatively by nasogastric tube. Another group of ten untreated patients were otherwise managed identically. Intergroup differences in required anesthetic and vasoactive drug doses and recovery times were measured and evaluated, as well as hemodynamics and plasma catecholamines prior to induction, after intubation, and at intervals intra- and postoperatively. Patients who received clonidine required less diazepam prior to induction, and receieved 40% less sufentanil during the anesthetic period, than did untreated controls. More control patients required the addition of isoflurane to prevent hypertension. Mean blood pressures and heart rates were elevated at many sampling points in patients not treated with clonidine. Four of the clonidine-treated group required atropine for treatment of bradycardia in the pre-incision period. Plasma catechlomaines were significantly lower throughout most of the study period in patients treated with clonidine. After cardiopulmonary bypass and postoperatively, cardiac outputs were significantly higher in the treated group. Patients who had received clonidine were extubated significantly earlier, and fewer of them shivered postoperatively. We conclude that perioperative treatment with clonidine reduced narcotic and anesthetic requirements, improved hemodynamics, reduced plasma catecholamines, and shortened the period of postoperative ventilation in patients undergoing coronary artery surgery.This publication has 6 references indexed in Scilit:
- Effect of Clonidine on Sympathoadrenal Response during Sodium Nitroprusside HypotensionAnesthesia & Analgesia, 1986
- Clonidine Prevents the Sympathetic Initiation and Aggravation of Poststenotic Myocardial IschemiaJournal of Cardiovascular Pharmacology, 1985
- Elevated catecholamines during cardiac surgery: Consequences of reperfusion of the postarrested heartThe American Journal of Cardiology, 1984
- Neuronal and adrenomedullary catecholamine release in response to cardiopulmonary bypass in man.Circulation, 1982
- V. Liquid chromatography with electrochemical detection for plasma norepinephrine and epinephrineLife Sciences, 1981
- Comparison of metabolic and vasoconstrictor stimuli on coronary vascular resistance in man.Circulation, 1979