The haemodynamic effects of propofol, given as a single dose of 2 mg kg-1 immediately followed by a continuous infusion of 6 mg kg-1 h-1, were studied in 10 elderly patients premedicated with lorazepam 1 mg i.v. All patients breathed room air spontaneously. Unconsciousness was successfully induced in all patients and persisted during the 60 min of the infusion. Statistically significant decreases in systolic and diastolic arterial pressures were observed 2 min after induction (28% and 19%, respectively) and during infusion (30% and 25%, respectively) and were related to decreases in systemic vascular resistance (21% following induction and 30% during infusion). Cardiac output was not affected at any time nor were stroke volume and heart rate. We conclude that the arterial hypotension associated with the induction and infusion of propofol is mainly a result of a decrease in afterload without compensatory increases in heart rate or cardiac output.
Propofol, the recently marketed intravenous induction agent for anaesthesia, is chemically unrelated to earlier anaesthetic drugs. This highly lipophilic agent has a fast onset and short, predictable duration of action due to its rapid penetration of the blood-brain barrier and distribution to the CNS, followed by redistribution to inactive tissue depots such as muscle and fat. On the basis of pharmacokinetic-pharmacodynamic modelling, a mean blood-brain equilibration half-life of only 2.9 minutes has been calculated. In most studies, the blood concentration curve of propofol has been best fitted to a 3-compartment open model, although in some patients only 2 exponential phases can be defined. The first exponential phase half-life of 2 to 3 minutes mirrors the rapid onset of action, the second (34 to 56 minutes) that of the high metabolic clearance, whereas the long third exponential phase half-life of 184 to 480 minutes describes the slow elimination of a small proportion of the drug remaining in poorly perfused tissues. Thus, after both a single intravenous injection and a continuous intravenous infusion, the blood concentrations rapidly decrease below those necessary to maintain sleep (around 1 mg/L), based on both the rapid distribution, redistribution and metabolism during the first and second exponential phases (more than 70% of the drug is eliminated during these 2 phases). During long term intravenous infusions cumulative drug concentrations and effects might be expected, but even then the recovery times do not appear to be much delayed. The liver is probably the main eliminating organ, and renal clearance appears to play little part in the total clearance of propofol. On the other hand, because the total body clearance may exceed liver blood flow, an extrahepatic metabolism or extrarenal elimination (e.g. via the lungs) has been suggested. Approximately 60% of a radiolabelled dose of propofol is excreted in the urine as 1- and 4-glucuronide and 4-sulphate conjugates of 2.6-diisopropyl 1,4-quinol, and the remainder consists of the propofol glucuronide. Thus for hepatic and renal diseases, co-medication, surgical procedure, gender and obesity do not appear to cause clinically significant changes in the pharmacokinetic profile of propofol, but the decrease in the clearance value in the elderly might produce higher concentrations during a long term infusion, with an increased drug effect. In addition, the lower induction dose observed in relation to increased age might be partly explained by a smaller central volume of distribution.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
Sufentanil pharmacokinetics were linear within the dose range studied. Drug detection up to 24 h after dosing was necessary to define the terminal elimination phase. The metabolic clearance approached liver blood flow and a large volume of distribution was identified, consistent with the long terminal elimination half-life. Simulations predicted that plasma sufentanil steady-state concentrations would rapidly decline after termination of an infusion despite the long half-lives.
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