CHAPTER 10 Volatile Anesthetics
2 What are the chemical structures of the more common anesthetic gases? Why do we no longer use the older ones?
Isoflurane, desflurane, and sevoflurane are the most commonly used volatile anesthetics. As the accompanying molecular structures demonstrate, they are substituted halogenated ethers, except halothane, a halogenated substituted alkane. Many older anesthetic agents had unfortunate properties and side effects such as flammability (cyclopropane and fluroxene), slow induction (methoxyflurane), hepatotoxicity (chloroform and fluroxene), nephrotoxicity (methoxyflurane), and the theoretic risk of seizures (enflurane) (Figure 10-1).
5 Define partition coefficient. Which partition coefficients are important?
Other important partition coefficients include brain to blood, fat to blood, liver to blood, and muscle to blood. Except for fat to blood, these coefficients are close to 1 (equally distributed). Fat has partition coefficients for different volatile agents of 30 to 60 (i.e., anesthetics continue to be taken into fat for quite some time after equilibration with other tissues) (Table 10-1).
6 Review the evolution in hypothesis as to how volatile anesthetics work
At the turn of the century Meyer and Overton independently observed that an increasing oil-to-gas partition coefficient correlated with anesthetic potency. The Meyer-Overton lipid solubility theory dominated for nearly half a century before it was modified.
Franks and Lieb found that an amphophilic solvent (octanol) correlated better with potency than lipophilicity and concluded that the anesthetic site must contain both polar and nonpolar sites.
Modifications of Meyer and Overton’s membrane expansion theories include the excessive volume theory, in which anesthesia is created when a polar cell membrane components and amphophilic anesthetics synergistically create a larger cell volume than the sum of the two volumes together.
In the critical volume hypothesis, anesthesia results when the cell volume at the anesthetic site reaches a critical size. These theories rely on the effects of membrane expansion on and at ion channels.
The previous theories oversimplify the mechanism of anesthetic action and have been abandoned for the following reasons: volatile anesthetics lead to only mild perturbations in lipids, and the same changes can be reproduced by changes in temperature without leading to behavioral changes; also, variations in size, rigidity, and location of the anesthetic in the lipid bilayer are similar to those in compounds that do not have anesthetic activity, which implies that specific receptors are involved.
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