Pharmacology for Anaesthesia and Intensive Care

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11 Muscle relaxants and anticholinesterases

Non-depolarizing muscle relaxants fall into one of two chemical groupings:
Aminosteroidal compounds – vecuronium, rocuronium, pancuronium
Benzylisoquinolinium compounds – atracurium, mivacurium, tubocurarine
Across the two chemical groups the drugs can be divided according to their duration
of action:
Short – mivacurium
Intermediate – atracurium
Long – pancuronium
Owing to their relatively polar nature, non-depolarizing drugs are unable to cross
lipid membranes resulting in a small volume of distribution. Some are hydrolyzed
in the plasma (atracurium, mivacurium) while others undergo a degree of hepatic
metabolism (pancuronium, vecuronium). The unmetabolized fraction is excreted in
the urine or bile.
Muscle relaxants are never given in isolation and so their potential for drug inter-
action should be considered (Table11.3).

Vecuronium
Vecuronium is a ‘clean’ drug, so called because it does not affect the cardiovascular
system or precipitate the release of histamine. Its chemical structure differs from
pancuronium by a single methyl group making it the monoquaternary analogue.

Presentation and uses
Vecuronium is potentially unstable in solution and so is presented as 10 mg freeze-
dried powder containing mannitol and sodium hydroxide and is dissolved in 5 ml
water before administration. At 0.1 mg.kg−^1 satisfactory intubating conditions are
reached in about 90–120 seconds. It has a medium duration of action.

Other effects
Cardiovascular – vecuronium has no cardiac effects but, unlike pancuronium or
tubocurarine, it may leave unchecked the bradycardias associated with fentanyl
and propofol.
Critical illness myopathy – this is seen most frequently in critically ill patients
in association with corticosteroids and/or muscle relaxants and may involve a
prolonged recovery.

Kinetics
Like pancuronium, vecuronium is metabolized in the liver by de-acetylation to 3-
and 17-hydroxy and 3,17-dihydroxy-vecuronium. Again the 3-hydroxy metabolite
carries significant muscle-relaxant properties, but unlike 3-hydroxypancuronium
it has a very short half-life and is of little clinical significance with normal renal
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