This randomized, double-blind study showed that, when combined with small-dose bupivacaine (0.125%), epidurally administered alfentanil is not more effective than i.v. administered alfentanil for postoperative pain management when the regimens are such that equivalent subanalgesic plasma alfentanil concentrations are obtained. A spinal mechanism of action for alfentanil could therefore not be demonstrated.
Compared to intravenous infusion of alfentanil epidural infusion resulting in the same plasma concentrations is not more effective in relieving postoperative pain. In view of this observation we were not able to demonstrate a spinal mechanism of alfentanil.
Drug delivery by target-controlled infusion (TCI) allows automatic adjustments of the infusion rate of a drug to maintain a desired target concentration. Since drug effect is more closely related to blood concentration than to infusion rate, drug delivery via TCI is capable of creating stable blood concentrations of intravenous anaesthetics and analgesics. In this article the concept and history of TCI are described. The rational administration of TCI requires an appropriate pharmacokinetic data set and knowledge of the concentration-effect relationship; therefore, general pharmacokinetic and pharmacodynamic aspects of intravenous anaesthetics and analgesics are also addressed. Intraoperative investigations have demonstrated that TCI drug delivery allows rapid titration to a desired effect. The use of TCI for postoperative analgesia is still experimental, but TCI can, in part, overcome the disadvantages associated with continuous infusions and patient-controlled analgesia regimens in the postoperative period. Although TCI is capable of creating stable blood concentrations, when the target concentration is changed the resulting effect correlates better with a theoretical effect site concentration. The efficacy of TCI systems that can perform effect-site steering are still to be explored.
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