SummaryThe effect of intrathecally administered magnesium sulphate on serum levels of magnesium, sodium, potassium, calcium and blood gas variables was studied in a rat model. Magnesium sulphate given intrathecally has previously been shown to produce segmental spinal blockade with no permanent neurological damage. The previous studies, however, had not investigated the possible systemic effects of the magnesium sulphate. The serum magnesium level increased significantly at 1 and 2 h after the intrathecal injection of both 6.3% and 12.6% magnesium sulphate (6.3%: 28% at 1 h, 24% at 2 h; 12.6%: 22% at 1 h, 16% at 2 h). These changes were not as great as occurred when the same dose of magnesium sulphate was administered intravenously. In all cases, the serum magnesium had returned to normal by 24 h. There were no significant changes in calcium, sodium or potassium levels, nor in arterial blood gas variables. These results show that intrathecally administered magnesium sulphate has little effect on electrolyte homeostasis. The increasing interest in magnesium as a physiological N-methyl-D-aspartate antagonist and its role in a variety of clinically important disorders characterised by intracellular calcium excess and magnesium deficiency [1][2][3][4][5] has prompted us to investigate the use of intrathecal magnesium sulphate in an experimental animal model.We have previously shown that when injected intrathecally in a rat model, magnesium sulphate, in a concentration iso-osmolar with rat plasma, will produce a state of segmental spinal anaesthesia which is both completely reversible and free of neurotoxic side-effects [6,7]. However, the same volume and concentration which resulted in spinal anaesthesia, when injected intravenously, did not produce general anaesthesia sufficient for a laparotomy procedure to be carried out painlessly.In an attempt further to understand the pharmacokinetic and pharmacodynamic consequences of an intrathecal injection of magnesium sulphate, we examined in the same rat model, with a nylon catheter chronically implanted in the lumbar intrathecal space, the serum levels of magnesium, sodium, potassium, calcium and also blood gas variables, both before and after injecting a bolus of magnesium sulphate in two different concentrations.
Methods