Local Anaesthetics Flashcards

1
Q

What is the function of local anesthetics

A

Their job is to prevent sensation and also stop pain, they have a local action and don’t cause any loss of consciousness. They block the conduction of action potentials.

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2
Q

What is the general chemical structure of a local anesthetic

A

Aromatic—Ester or Amide—Basic side chain 2/3 Amine

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3
Q

What is Preferred and Ester or an amide link within the structure of a local anesthetic

A

Ester links tend to be hydrolyzed quite quickly therefore there have a shorter duration of action for these anesthetics whereas Amides are a bit more hardy they need to go through the liver to be metabolized and thus tend to last longer and are not so prone to hydrolysis

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4
Q

At physiological PH Will most of the molecule be negatively or positively charged

A

At physiological pH when these agents are injected most of the molecules will be positively charged by the protonation of the nitrogen in the side chain and positively charged molecules will have difficulty diffusing into some cellular components

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5
Q

What is the site of action of a local anesthetic

A

Usually it is the sodium channels but for a local anesthetic to work it Has to penetrate inside the cell to gain access to it’s binding site

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6
Q

LA + H+= LA+

A

A)Most of the equilibrium will lie on the right hand side (PK8 or nine) LA+ Will not penetrate through the hydrophobic environment of a connective tissue sheath a.k.a. Schwan cell
B) LA Will diffuse through the lipid medium establishing a new equilibrium with in the lipid medium and axon
C) once inside the axon LA+ Will block the sodium channels preventing the influx of sodium into the sodium channels and hence action potential will fail losing sensation/pain

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7
Q

What are the twomechanism of action of a local anesthetic

A

A)Hydrophilic pathway

B)hydrophobic pathway

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8
Q

What Events take place during a hydrophilic pathway mechanism

A

A) LA goes through membrane
B) LA + H+= LA+
C) LA+ in the cell will block the open sodium channel by binding inside the ion channel and presenting a physical plug to the free movement of sodium ions.
Note; here the sodium channel is open

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9
Q

What events take place during a hydrophobic pathway

A

La diffuses through to the middle of the membrane
LA moved up to the side of the channel, and travels through the porous channel
Once inside the ion it is protonated and blocks the sodium channel that has not yet opened
Note: in the hydrophobic pathway the sodium channel has not yet opened

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10
Q

What are the four ways of administrating local anesthetics

A

A) Topical administration
B) infiltration administration
C) peripheral nerve block administration
D) Central nerve block administration

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11
Q

what is the principle of topical administration

A

It is mostly used on skin, cornea (opthalmogical investigations), in the cavity
Note that these days not so much used on the skin because they can cause some side effects/side reactions

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12
Q

What is the principle of infiltration administration

A

It is an injection around nerve endings (in the dermis/intradermal layer) mostly used in dentistry, note that there is a time to delay before you feel the effects of anesthesia 5 to 10 minutes

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13
Q

What is the principle of peripheral nerve block administration

A

It is an injection close to major sensory nerve trunks a.k.a. used to anesthetize the a limb where general anesthesia might not work. Hence The injection site is either topical, inradermal or in the subcutaneous layer

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14
Q

What is the principle of Central nerve block administration

A

It is an injection into either the subcutaneous space to produce spinal anaesthesia or epidural anesthesia to anesthetize specific nerve roots in the spinal cord a.k.a. the lumbar region of the vertibral column

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15
Q

Epidural injection

A

Won’t penetrate all the way through the arachnoid membrane and dura matter and is injected between lumbar three and four. It will stop short just into the fatty tissue between the two vertebrae to anesthetize only those nerve fibers that flow out of the spinal cord at this particular level therefore more local versus intrathecal is more widespread

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16
Q

Intrathecal/spinal anesthesia

A

Penetrates into the CSF at around L5/6.CSF is a nutritive medium which has no cells- this area is the only area where it’s safe to inject local anesthetic without damaging the spinal cord which could cause paralysis spinal cord fills most of the area between the bones ( L2 and above) and it would be very difficult to safely inject any aesthetic

17
Q

Name for local anesthetics

A
A) cocaine - ester linkage -short
B) procaine -ester -short
C) lignocaine - amide - intermediate 
D) Prilocaine - amide  - I
E)Amethocaine - amide - long use
18
Q

How can we prolong on the duration of action of a local anesthetic

A

We need to reduce local blood flow a.k.a. constrict your blood vessels. And the easiest way to do that is with adrenaline