The pulmonary first-pass uptake of five nondepolarizing muscle relaxants in the pig

A.M Beaufort, Hans Proost, M.C Houwertjes, J Roggeveld, J.MKH Wierda

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

8 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Background: It is not known whether the lungs influence the early pharmacokinetics of muscle relaxants and, if they do, whether differences in pulmonary uptake contribute to the differences in potency and/or onset time among muscle relaxants. Because the lungs are uniquely positioned, receive the entire cardiac output, have a large capillary surface area, and can temporarily store various basic drugs, the authors determined whether substantial pulmonary first-pass uptake of muscle relaxants occurs.

Methods: In 14 pigs, rocuronium, vecuronium, Org 9487, Org 7617, or d-tubocurarine were administered simultaneously with indocyanin green within 1 s into the right ventricle, and then arterial blood was sampled every 1.2 s (in the first min). The tibialis muscle response was registered mechanomyographically.

Results: The maximum block was 93% (68-100% [median and range]). Onset times ranged from 83 s (78-86 s) for rocuronium to 182 s (172-192 s) for d-tubocurarine. Fraction-versus-time outflow curves showed that the peak of muscle relaxants and indocyanin green occurred almost simultaneously. Pulmonary first-pass retention was negligible. The retention of muscle relaxants at 95% passage of indocyanin green was -9% (-31 to 18%). The difference in the mean transit time between muscle relaxant and indocyanin green was 1.0 (0.8 to 1.4), 0.2 (-0.8 to 0.3), 0.3 (0.2 to 0.4), 0.5 (0.2 to 1.3), and -2.2 s for rocuronium, vecuronium, Org 9487, Org 7617, and d-tubocurarine, respectively.

Conclusions: There is no substantial pulmonary first-pass uptake of rocuronium, vecuronium, Org 9487, Org 7617, or d-tubocurarine in pigs. Therefore, differences in pulmonary first-pass uptake do not contribute to the differences in potency and/or onset time among muscle relaxants.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)477-483
Number of pages7
JournalAnesthesiology
Volume90
Issue number2
Publication statusPublished - Feb-1999

Keywords

  • onset time
  • pharmacokinetics
  • plasma concentration
  • potency
  • PLASMA-PROTEIN BINDING
  • HUMAN-LUNG
  • RAT LUNG
  • FENTANYL
  • ALFENTANIL
  • PHARMACOKINETICS
  • SUFENTANIL
  • LIDOCAINE
  • CLEARANCE
  • MORPHINE

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