3. Pharmacology
          3.2. Inhalational anaesthetic agents
              3.2.5. Comparisons of inhalational agents
 3.2.5.1. CNS effects of inhalational anaesthetic agents

CNS effects of inhalational anaesthetic agents

[SH4:p47-50]

Effects of inhaled anaesthetics on CNS

  • Does not produce retrograde amnesia or prolonged impairment of intellectual function
  • Induces decrease in cerebral activity
  • Cerebral metabolic oxygen demand decreases as well
  • Induces increase in cerebral blood flow
    --> May increase ICP

EEG

  • All inhalational AA increase frequency and voltage on EEG at <0.4 MAC
  • Cerebral metabolic oxygen requirement starts to decrease abruptly at about 0.4 MAC

Seizure activity

  • Enflurane can produce fast frequency and high voltage on EEG and can lead to seizure-like EEG activity
    * Especially when > 2 MAC or PaCO2 < 30
    * The only inhalational anaesthetic agent to cause frank seizures
  • Isoflurane causes burst suppression at 1.5 MAC, and electrical silence at 2.0 MAC
    * i.e. Isoflurane suppresses convulsion
  • Desflurane and sevoflurane do not produce convulsive activity
  • Sevoflurane can suppress convulsive activity induced with lidocaine

Nitrous oxide

  • N2O may increase motor activity with clonus and opisthotonus
  • N2O at high concentration (in hyperbaric chamber)
    --> alternating periods of muscle activity and relaxation
  • Acute N2O dependency can lead to withdrawal seizure

Awareness

  • Volatile anaesthetic agents are not equally effective in preventing awareness

For example,

  • Isoflurane at 0.4 MAC prevents recall and response to command
  • N2O requires greater than 0.5 to 0.6 MAC to produce similar effect

Cerebral blood flow (CBF)

Two opposing forces:

  • Intrinsic vasodilatory effect of AA
  • Vasoconstriction due to flow-metabolism coupling

Overall,

  • Dose-dependent increase in CBF
    * Despite decreased cerebral metabolic requirement

NB:

  • According to [MCQ:Q51]
    * Halothane causes greater cerebral vasodilation than enflurane [???]
    * Halothane also causes a loss of autoregulation [???]

Intrinsic vasodilatory property

  • Isoflurane > sevoflurane
  • N2O > Desflurane

ICP and CSF

  • ICP tends to increase with anaesthetics due to increased CBF

ICP

  • Hyperventilation to reduce PaCO2 to 30mmHg opposes the tendency of inhaled anaesthetics to increase ICP
  • Desflurane <0.8 MAC does not increase ICP
  • Desflurane 1.1 MAC increases ICP by 7mmHg

CSF

  • Isoflurane does not affect production, but decrease resistance to absorption
    --> Minimal increase in ICP
  • Enflurane increase both rate of production and resistance to absorption
    --> Increased ICP
  • N2O does not affect production or absorption
    --> ICP increase with increased CBF


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