Sevoflurane Increases Lumbar Cerebrospinal Fluid Pressure in Normocapnic Patients Undergoing Transsphenoidal Hypophysectomy
- 1 July 1999
- journal article
- clinical trial
- Published by Wolters Kluwer Health in Anesthesiology
- Vol. 91 (1) , 127-130
- https://doi.org/10.1097/00000542-199907000-00020
Abstract
Background: The data on the effect of sevoflurane on intracranial pressure in humans are still limited and inconclusive. The authors hypothesized that sevoflurane would increase intracranial pressure as compared to propofoL METHODS: In 20 patients with no evidence of mass effect undergoing transsphenoidal hypophysectomy, anesthesia was induced with intravenous fentanyl and propofol and maintained with 70% nitrous oxide in oxygen and a continuous propofol infusion, 100 microg x kg(-1) x min(-1). The authors assigned patients to two groups randomized to receive only continued propofol infusion (n = 10) or sevoflurane (n = 10) for 20 min. During the 20-min study period, each patient in the sevoflurane group received, in random order, two concentrations (0.5 times the minimum alveolar concentration [MAC] and 1.0 MAC end-tidal) of sevoflurane for 10 min each. The authors continuously monitored lumbar cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) pressure, blood pressure, heart rate, and anesthetic concentrations. Results: Lumbar CSF pressure increased by 2+/-2 mmHg (mean+/-SD) with both 0.5 MAC and 1 MAC of sevoflurane. Cerebral perfusion pressure decreased by 11+/-5 mmHg with 0.5 MAC and by 15+/-4 mmHg with 1.0 MAC of sevoflurane. Systolic blood pressure decreased with both concentrations of sevoflurane. To maintain blood pressure within predetermined limits (within+/-20% of baseline value), phenylephrine was administered to 5 of 10 patients in the sevoflurane group (range = 50-300 microg) and no patients in the propofol group. Lumbar CSF pressure, cerebral perfusion pressure, and systolic blood pressure did not change in the propofol group. Conclusions: Sevoflurane, at 0.5 and 1.0 MAC, increases lumbar CSF pressure. The changes produced by 1.0 MAC sevoflurane did not differ from those observed in a previous study with 1.0 MAC isoflurane or desflurane.Keywords
This publication has 6 references indexed in Scilit:
- Intracranial Pressure, Middle Cerebral Artery Flow Velocity, and Plasma Inorganic Fluoride Concentrations in Neurosurgical Patients Receiving Sevoflurane or IsofluraneAnesthesia & Analgesia, 1997
- Desflurane and Isoflurane Increase Lumbar Cerebrospinal Fluid Pressure in Normocapnic Patients Undergoing Transsphenoidal HypophysectomyAnesthesiology, 1996
- Sevoflurane Versus Halothane Anesthesia After Acute Cryogenic Brain Injury in Rabbits: Relationship Between Arterial and Intracranial PressureJournal of Neurosurgical Anesthesiology, 1994
- SEVOFLURANE DOES NOT INCREASE INTRACRANIAL PRESSURE IN HYPERVENTILATED DOGSBritish Journal of Anaesthesia, 1993
- The Effects of Sevoflurane on Cerebral Blood Flow, Cerebral Metabolic Rate for Oxygen, Intracranial Pressure, and the Electroencephalogram are Similar to Those of Isoflurane in the RabbitAnesthesiology, 1988
- SevofluraneAnesthesia & Analgesia, 1975