Sufentanil and vecuronium are commonly used simultaneously in anaesthesia. Bradycardia and asystole have been described immediately after the administration of these two compounds. Therefore, the purpose of the present study was to evaluate the direct cardiac effects of sufentanil and vecuronium in all parts of the cardiac pacemaker and conduction system. The electrophysiological effects of sufentanil and vecuronium were studied in isolated spontaneously beating guinea-pig hearts perfused by the method of Langendorff. At a concentration of 0.1 mumol/l sufentanil a significant reduction of the spontaneous sinus rate, prolongation of atrioventricular, intraventricular and His' bundle conduction could be observed. The highest concentration of 10 mumol/l of sufentanil led to an overall slowing of conduction velocity and to an profound showing of spontaneous sinus rate. AV nodal as well as atrial and ventricular refractoriness were markedly prolonged at this high concentration of sufentanil. In contrast, during perfusion with vecuronium at a concentration of 0.1 mumol/l up to 10 mumol/l no significant effects on cardiac conduction and pacemaker activity could be observed. In conclusion, the electrophysiological effects of sufentanil are comparable to that of unspecific calcium antagonists. Therefore, especially in patients with a preexisting damage of the cardiac conduction system, the indirect effect of the combination of sufentanil and vecuronium which is predominantly responsible for bradycardia and asystole may be worsened by the direct effects of sufentanil.
In this prospective study we analysed 336 consecutive central venous catheters in neonates less than 3500 g. A protocol standardizing the technique of insertion, the care of the catheter, the preparation of solutions and weekly bacteriological screening was applied to all catheter insertions. Mechanical complications were observed in 15 (6%), catheter dislodgement (5%), obstruction (8%), perforation (2%) and caval vein thrombosis (0.6%). Routine bacteriological cultures of feeding solutions and infusion devices showed a contamination rate of 3.5% and 2%. Skin swab and catheter tip cultures after catheter removal demonstrated positive results in 6% and 4.7%, but catheter related sepsis occurred in only 2.3%. Staphylococcus epidermidis was found in 81 % of all positive bacterial cultures. Four point seven per cent of catheters were removed for suspected infection though only one third of them produced a bacteriological growth. We conclude that the risk of mechanical complications and contamination of central venous catheters in neonates can be minimized by the use of a standardized protocol.
Detajmium (4--3'-diethylamino-2'-hydroxypropyl--ajmalin) is an Na(+)-channel-blocking drug with an extremely long recovery from use-dependent sodium channel block. The aim of the present study was to investigate the rate-dependent effects of detajmium on the intraventricular conduction of isolated, spontaneously beating, guinea pig hearts in comparison with the effects of propafenone. Detajmium (0.3 microM) and propafenone (0.3 microM) caused comparable prolongations of the intraventricular conduction time during sinus rhythm. The time to steady state of the rate-dependent QRS prolongation during rapid ventricular pacing follows an exponential function of the beat number after an abrupt change of frequency and is characterized by a drug-specific time constant. This time constant was significantly longer for detajmium (tau = 265 +/- 165 beats; mean +/- SEM; n = 6) than for propafenone (tau = 31 +/- 4 beats; n = 11; p < 0.01). In the presence of propafenone, QRS duration peaked initially before decreasing to a steady state. Detajmium, in contrast, progressively broadened the QRS complex. Both substances caused the greatest increase in the ventricular effective refractory period (V-ERP) when the number of conditioning stimuli (interstimulus interval, 120 ms) was in the range of the time constant. However, when the number of conditioning stimuli was further increased, the V-ERP for propafenone diminished progressively. In conclusion, propafenone displayed, in comparison with detajmium, only a transient rate-dependent effect on intraventricular conduction and V-ERP.
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