Pharmacology for Anaesthesia and Intensive Care

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SECTION II Coredrugs in anaesthetic practice


8
General anaesthetic agents

Our understanding of the mechanisms involved in the action of general anaesthetics
has increased considerably in recent times and is discussed below. This is followed
bysections discussing intravenous and inhaled anaesthetic agents.

Mechanisms of general anaesthetic action
Any mechanism of general anaesthetic action must be able to explain: loss of con-
scious awareness, loss of response to noxious stimuli (anti-nociceptive effect) and
perhaps most important of all, reversibility.

Anatomical sites of action
General anaesthetic agents affect both brain and spinal cord to account for phys-
iological responses to nociception, loss of consciousness and inhibition of explicit
memory. Auditory and sensory evoked potential data implicate the thalamus as the
most likely primary target, but secondary sites such as the limbic system (associated
with memory) and certain cortical areas are also important. Halogenated volatile
anaesthetics appear to have a greater influence on spinal cord than do the intra-
venous agents.

Molecular theories
Atthe beginning of the 19th century, Overton and Meyer independently described
the linear correlation between the lipid solubility of anaesthetic agents and their
potency (Figure8.1). This correlation was so impressive, given the great variation
in structure of these agents, that it suggested a non-specific mechanism of action
based on this physicochemical property. Later interpretation pointed out that any
highly lipophilic area was a potential site of action, with cell membranes being the
most likely contender given the high concentration of lipids. There are problems
with a unified theory based on lipid interactions: some general anaesthetics, such as
ketamine, are extreme outliers, and the stereoisomers R-etomidate and S-etomidate
have identical lipid solubility but only R-etomidate has anaesthetic properties.

Membrane lipids
There are several potential lipophilic sites in cell membranes, including the lipid
bilayer itself and the annular lipids surrounding ionic channels.
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