Developmental Toxicity of Nondepolarizing Muscle Relaxants in Cultured Rat Embryos
Open Access
- 1 June 1992
- journal article
- pain medicine
- Published by Wolters Kluwer Health in Anesthesiology
- Vol. 76 (6) , 999-1003
- https://doi.org/10.1097/00000542-199206000-00021
Abstract
Evidence of developmental toxicity of clinically used nondepolarizing muscle relaxants was sought in rat embryos grown in culture. Embryos were explanted at 8 AM on day 9 of gestation (presomite stage, plug day = day 0), and were cultured in rotating bottles with medium containing various concentrations of d-tubocurarine, pancuronium, atracurium, and vecuronium. At 10 AM on day 11 of gestation (forelimb bud stage), culture was terminated and embryos were examined for general morphology. Treatment with tested agents resulted in dose-dependent developmental toxicity; namely, growth retardation seen as decreased crown-rump length, decreased number of somite pairs, and morphologic abnormalities. However, the concentrations that caused toxicity were at least 30-fold greater than serum concentrations clinically achieved in the mother. We conclude that these muscle relaxants have a low potential for causing developmental toxicity during organogenesis.Keywords
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