Mosby items and derived items © 2005, 2002 by Mosby, Inc. CHAPTER 11 General and Local Anesthetics.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Introduction to General Anaesthesia
Advertisements

Copyright © 2013, 2010 by Saunders, an imprint of Elsevier Inc. Chapter 16 Drugs That Block Nicotinic Cholinergic Transmission: Neuromuscular Blocking.
Copyright © 2013, 2010 by Saunders, an imprint of Elsevier Inc. Chapter 27 General Anesthetics.
General and Local Anesthetics
Skeletal Muscle Relaxants (Neuromuscular Blocking Agents)
PTP 546 Module 15 Pharmacology of Anesthetics Jayne Hansche Lobert, MS, RN, ACNS-BC, NP 1Lobert.
General anesthetics Dr Sanjeewani Fonseka.
Local & General Anesthetics Ch 11. General Anesthesia Alters responses of the Central Nervous system Causes one or more of the following Pain relief Muscle.
Agents Used to Treat Musculoskeletal Health Alterations.
Skeletal muscle relaxants
GENERAL ANAESTHESIA M. Attia SVUH Feb.2007.
Mosby items and derived items © 2007 by Mosby, Inc., an affiliate of Elsevier Inc. Chapter 12 General Anesthetics.
MCMP 407 General Anesthesia  Sleep induction  Loss of pain responses  Amnesia  Skeletal muscle relaxation  Loss of reflexes.
Mong Lam, CRNA.  History  Basic concepts  Types of anesthesia  Anesthesia machine.
Skeletal Muscle Relaxants
Pain Medications and Muscle Relaxers ESAT 4001 Pharmacology in Athletic Training.
CNS depressants CNS depressants
Members of the Surgical Team Surgeon Surgical assistant Anesthesiologist Certified registered nurse anesthetist Holding area nurse Circulating nurse Scrub.
Interventions for Intraoperative Clients Care. Members of the Surgical Team  Surgeon  Surgical assistant  Anesthesiologist  Certified registered nurse.
Joint Special Operations Medical Training Center LOCAL/REGIONAL ANESTHESIA SFC Shrader.
ANESTHESIA PART I. Anesthesia Types of Concepts Administration & Selection.
General Anesthesia Part1
General Anesthesia Dr. Israa.
ANESTHETICS Dr.Shadi- Sarahroodi Pharm.D & PhD PUBLISHED BY
Mosby items and derived items © 2007, 2005, 2002 by Mosby, Inc., an affiliate of Elsevier Inc. CHAPTER 11 General and Local Anesthetics.
Local Anesthetic DR. ISRAA. Local Anesthetic A local anesthetic is an agent that interrupts pain impulses in a specific region of the body without a loss.
Local Anesthetic A local anesthetic is an agent that interrupts pain impulses in a specific region of the body without a loss of patient consciousness.
Nursing Care of Patients Having Surgery
Local Anesthetics Department of Pharmacology Zhang Yan-mei.
Copyright © 2008 Lippincott Williams & Wilkins. Introductory Clinical Pharmacology Chapter 21 Anesthetic Drugs.
CNS Depressants Lab # 2.
Local anesthetics Drug produce reversible conduction block of neural impulses transmission of autonomic, sensory and motor neural impulses.
DR. MOHD NAZAM ANSARI. Partial or complete loss of sensation with or with out loss of consciousness as a result of disease, injury, or administration.
General Anesthetics Learning objectives Explain the purpose of application of GAs Classify the GAs & the typical drugs Identify the mechanism of.
General anesthetics.
Pharmacologic Adjuncts to Airway Management and Ventilation
Medical-Surgical Nursing: An Integrated Approach, 2E Chapter 15
Pharmacology DH206 Chapter 10: General Anesthetics Lisa Mayo, RDH, BSDH Copyright © 2011, 2007 Mosby, Inc., an affiliate of Elsevier. All rights reserved.
Local Anesthetic A local anesthetic is an agent that interrupts pain impulses in a specific region of the body without a loss of patient consciousness.
Introduction to anaesthesia
2 3  Which influence the selection of the anesthetics are  Liver & kidney – target organs for toxic effects by the release of Fluoride, Bromide.
Inhaled anesthetics By: Israa Omar.
Autonomic Nervous System 6-Anticholinergic Drugs
Chapter 45 Drugs Used to Treat the Muscular System 45-1 Mosby items and derived items © 2013, 2010, 2007, 2004 by Mosby, Inc., an affiliate of Elsevier.
Definition : Anesthesia (an =without, aisthesis = sensation ) Anesthesia is medication that attempts to eliminate pain impulse from reaching the brain.
Interventions for Intraoperative Clients Care. Members of the Surgical Team Surgeon Surgeon Surgical assistant Surgical assistant Anesthesiologist Anesthesiologist.
Outside of the Comfort Zone: Caring for Post-Anesthesia Patients Outside of the PACU A Primer for ICU and Medical-Surgical Nurses By Laura Marovich RN,
Biomedical Engineering Lecture on Drugs for sedation, general anesthesia, and other purposes.
Terminology: -Surgery -Operation -Operating room (theater) -Anesthesia/ Anesthetist.
CHAPTER 11 General and Local Anesthetics
Anesthesia Part 3 By Alaina Darby.
HINDU COLLEGE PG COURSE.
General and Local Anesthetics
General Anesthesia.
Munir Ghatraibeh, MD, PhD, MHPE. July, 2015
General Anesthesia.
Chapter 15 General Anesthesia
Rocuronium New drug authorized to administer by DHS. BUT is limited to use in a successfully intubated patient. Will only be used for patients being transferred.
Anesthesia In the “old days” the following were used for anesthesia.
School of Pharmacy, University of Nizwa
LOCAL ANESTHETICS Dr .Rupak Bhattarai.
Drugs Affecting the Central Nervous System
Introduction to Clinical Pharmacology Chapter 17 Anesthetic Drugs
Copyright © 2011 by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
Cholinergic Antagonist
Cholinergic Antagonist
CNS Depressants Lab # 2.
Anesthesia concepts and considerations
Introductory Clinical Pharmacology Chapter 21 Anesthetic Drugs
Introduction to Clinical Pharmacology
Presentation transcript:

Mosby items and derived items © 2005, 2002 by Mosby, Inc. CHAPTER 11 General and Local Anesthetics

Mosby items and derived items © 2005, 2002 by Mosby, Inc. Anesthetics Agents that depress the central nervous system (CNS) –Depression of consciousness –Loss of responsiveness to sensory stimulation (including pain) –Muscle relaxation Anesthesia: the state of depressed CNS activity

Mosby items and derived items © 2005, 2002 by Mosby, Inc. Anesthesia A state of depressed CNS activity Two types –General anesthesia –Local anesthesia Balanced anesthesia

Mosby items and derived items © 2005, 2002 by Mosby, Inc. General Anesthetics Agents that induce a state in which the CNS is altered to produce varying degrees of: –Pain relief –Depression of consciousness –Skeletal muscle relaxation –Reflex reduction

Mosby items and derived items © 2005, 2002 by Mosby, Inc. General Anesthetics (cont'd) Inhaled anesthetics –Volatile liquids or gases that are vaporized in oxygen and inhaled Injectable anesthetics –Administered intravenously

Mosby items and derived items © 2005, 2002 by Mosby, Inc. Inhaled Anesthetics Inhaled gas –Nitrous oxide (“laughing gas”) Inhaled volatile liquids –enflurane (Ethrane) –halothane (Fluothane) –isoflurane (Forane) –methoxyflurane (Penthrane) –sevoflurane (Ultane)

Mosby items and derived items © 2005, 2002 by Mosby, Inc. Injectable Anesthetics Used: –To induce or maintain general anesthesia –To induce amnesia –As an adjunct to inhalation-type anesthetics

Mosby items and derived items © 2005, 2002 by Mosby, Inc. Injectable Anesthetics (cont'd) etomidate (Amidate) ketamine (Ketalar) methohexital (Brevital)* propofol (Diprivan)* thiamylal (Surital) thiopental (Pentothal)* *May also be used as adjunctive agents at lower dosages

Mosby items and derived items © 2005, 2002 by Mosby, Inc. Adjunctive Agents Sedative-hypnotics –Barbiturates (secobarbital, thiopental) –Benzodiazepines (diazepam, midazolam) Opioids (narcotics) –morphine, fentanyl, sufentanil

Mosby items and derived items © 2005, 2002 by Mosby, Inc. Adjunctive Agents (cont'd) Neuromuscular blocking agents (NMBAs) –Depolarizing agents (succinylcholine) –Nondepolarizing agents (pancuronium, d-Tubocurarine, vecuronium) Anticholinergics –atropine, glycopyrrolate, scopolamine

Mosby items and derived items © 2005, 2002 by Mosby, Inc. Mechanism of Action Varies according to agent Overton-Meyer theory Overall effect –Orderly and systematic reduction of sensory and motor CNS functions –Progressive depression of cerebral and spinal cord functions

Mosby items and derived items © 2005, 2002 by Mosby, Inc. Indications General anesthetics used during surgical procedures to produce: –Unconsciousness –Skeletal muscular relaxation –Visceral smooth muscle relaxation Rapid onset, quickly metabolized

Mosby items and derived items © 2005, 2002 by Mosby, Inc. Side Effects Vary according to dosage and agent used Sites primarily affected –Heart, peripheral circulation, liver, kidneys, respiratory tract Myocardial depression is commonly seen

Mosby items and derived items © 2005, 2002 by Mosby, Inc. Side Effects (cont'd) Malignant hyperthermia –Occurs during or after general anesthesia –Sudden elevation in body temperature (>104° F) –Life-threatening emergency

Mosby items and derived items © 2005, 2002 by Mosby, Inc. Local Anesthetics Also called regional anesthetics Used to render a specific portion of the body insensitive to pain Interfere with nerve impulse transmission to specific areas of the body Do not cause loss of consciousness

Mosby items and derived items © 2005, 2002 by Mosby, Inc. Local Anesthetics (cont'd) Topical –Applied directly to skin or mucous membranes –Creams, solutions, ointments, gels, ophthalmic drops, lozenges, suppositories Parenteral –Injected into the CNS by various spinal injection techniques

Mosby items and derived items © 2005, 2002 by Mosby, Inc. Types of Local Anesthesia Epidural Infiltration Nerve block Spinal Topical

Mosby items and derived items © 2005, 2002 by Mosby, Inc. Parenteral Anesthetic Agents lidocaine (Xylocaine) mepivacaine (Carbocaine) procaine (Novocain) tetracaine (Pontocaine) bupivacaine (Marcaine) ropivacaine (Naropin)

Mosby items and derived items © 2005, 2002 by Mosby, Inc. Drug Effects First, autonomic activity is lost Then pain and other sensory functions are lost Motor activity is the last to be lost As local agents wear off, they do so in reverse order (motor, sensory, then autonomic activity are restored)

Mosby items and derived items © 2005, 2002 by Mosby, Inc. Indications Local anesthetics are used for: –Surgical, dental, and diagnostic procedures –Treatment of certain types of pain Infiltration anesthesia Nerve block anesthesia

Mosby items and derived items © 2005, 2002 by Mosby, Inc. Indications (cont'd) Infiltration anesthesia –Minor surgical and dental procedures –Injection of the anesthetic solution intradermally, subcutaneously, or submucosally across the path of nerves supplying the target area –May be given in a circular pattern around the operative area

Mosby items and derived items © 2005, 2002 by Mosby, Inc. Indications (cont'd) Nerve block anesthesia –Used for surgical, dental, and diagnostic procedures –Also used for therapeutic management of pain –The anesthetic agent is injected directly into or around the nerve trunks or nerve ganglia that supply the area to be numbed

Mosby items and derived items © 2005, 2002 by Mosby, Inc. Side/Adverse Effects Usually limited Adverse effects result if: –Inadvertent intravascular injection occurs –Excessive dose or rate of injection is given –Slow metabolic breakdown –Injection into a highly vascular tissue

Mosby items and derived items © 2005, 2002 by Mosby, Inc. Neuromuscular Blocking Agents Also known as NMBAs Prevent nerve transmission in certain muscles, resulting in paralysis of the muscle Used with anesthetics during surgery

Mosby items and derived items © 2005, 2002 by Mosby, Inc. Neuromuscular Blocking Agents (cont'd) When used during surgery, artificial mechanical ventilation is required –These drugs paralyze respiratory and skeletal muscles –Patient cannot breathe on his/her own –Do not cause sedation or relief of pain –Patient may be paralyzed yet conscious

Mosby items and derived items © 2005, 2002 by Mosby, Inc. Neuromuscular Blocking Agents (cont'd) Depolarizing agents Nondepolarizing agents –Short acting –Intermediate acting –Long acting

Mosby items and derived items © 2005, 2002 by Mosby, Inc. NMBAs: Depolarizing Agent succinylcholine is the only one Works similarly to neurotransmitter acetylcholine (ACh), causing depolarization Metabolism is slower than ACh, so as long as succinylcholine is present, repolarization cannot occur Result: flaccid muscle paralysis

Mosby items and derived items © 2005, 2002 by Mosby, Inc. NMBAs: Nondepolarizing Agents Short acting –mivacurium (Mivacron) Intermediate acting –atracurium (Tracrium) –rocuronium (Zemuron) Long acting –pancuronium (Pavulon) –d-Tubocurarine (dTC)

Mosby items and derived items © 2005, 2002 by Mosby, Inc. Nondepolarizing NMBAs Prevent ACh from acting at the neuromuscular junctions Nerve cell membrane is not depolarized, muscle fibers are not stimulated Skeletal muscle contraction does not occur

Mosby items and derived items © 2005, 2002 by Mosby, Inc. Neuromuscular Blocking Agents First sensation felt is weakness Followed by total flaccid paralysis Small, rapidly moving muscles are affected first (fingers, eyes), then limbs, neck, trunk Finally, intercostal muscles and the diaphragm are affected, resulting in cessation of respirations Recovery of muscles usually occurs in reverse order

Mosby items and derived items © 2005, 2002 by Mosby, Inc. NMBAs: Indications Main use: maintaining controlled ventilation during surgical procedures Endotracheal intubation (short acting) To reduce muscle contraction in an area that needs surgery Diagnostic agents for myasthenia gravis Other uses

Mosby items and derived items © 2005, 2002 by Mosby, Inc. NMBAs: Side/Adverse Effects Few when used appropriately May cause: –Hypotension (blockade of autonomic ganglia) –Tachycardia (blockade of muscarinic receptors) –Hypotension (release of histamine) Effects vary according to site

Mosby items and derived items © 2005, 2002 by Mosby, Inc. NMBAs: Overdose Overdose causes prolonged paralysis requiring prolonged mechanical ventilation Cardiovascular collapse may occur Several conditions may increase the sensitivity of a patient to NMBAs

Mosby items and derived items © 2005, 2002 by Mosby, Inc. Moderate Sedation Combination of an IV benzodiazepine and an opiate analgesic used Anxiety and sensitivity to pain are reduced, and patient cannot recall the procedure Preserves the patient’s ability to maintain own airway and to respond to verbal commands

Mosby items and derived items © 2005, 2002 by Mosby, Inc. Moderate Sedation (cont'd) Used for diagnostic procedures and minor surgical procedures that do not require deep anesthesia Topical anesthetic may be applied also Rapid recovery time and greater safety profile than general anesthesia

Mosby items and derived items © 2005, 2002 by Mosby, Inc. Nursing Implications Always assess past history of surgeries and response to anesthesia Assess past history, allergies, medications Assess use of alcohol, illicit drugs, opioids

Mosby items and derived items © 2005, 2002 by Mosby, Inc. Nursing Implications Assessment is vital during pre-, intra-, and postoperative phases –Vital signs –Baseline labwork, ECG –Pulse oximeter (PO 2 ) –ABCs (airway, breathing, circulation) –Monitor all body systems

Mosby items and derived items © 2005, 2002 by Mosby, Inc. Nursing Implications Nursing considerations during the perioperative phase include the: –Preoperative phase –Intraoperative phase –Postoperative phase Each phase has its own complex and very specific nursing actions

Mosby items and derived items © 2005, 2002 by Mosby, Inc. Nursing Implications Close and frequent observation of the patient and all body systems During a procedure, monitor vital signs, ABCs Watch for sudden elevations in body temperature, which may indicate malignant hyperthermia

Mosby items and derived items © 2005, 2002 by Mosby, Inc. Nursing Implications During recovery, monitor for cardiovascular depression, respiratory depression, and complications of anesthesia Implement safety measures during recovery, especially if motor/sensory loss occurs due to local anesthesia

Mosby items and derived items © 2005, 2002 by Mosby, Inc. Nursing Implications Reorient patient to his/her surroundings Provide preoperative teaching about the surgical procedure and anesthesia Teach the patient about postoperative turning, coughing, deep breathing

Mosby items and derived items © 2005, 2002 by Mosby, Inc. Nursing Implications If an NMBA is to be used for a procedure when the patient is to be awake, teach the patient that he/she may be paralyzed but still able to hear and feel