LA: Chapter 3 reference PDF Flashcards

1
Q

Benefits of
regional vs. GA w/ opioids

A

↑ pain control
↑ patient satisfaction (lol idc)

↓ stress response to surgery
↓ intraop & postop blood loss
↓ PONV
↓ logistic requirements

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2
Q

ability of a given local anesthetic to block a nerve is r/t (4)

A

length of the nerve
diameter
myelination
anesthetic used

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3
Q

T/F
Myelinated nerves need to be blocked only at nodes of Ranvier

A

True
approximately 3 consecutive nodes

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4
Q

Myelinated nerves require (more/less) anesthetic to block.

A

less

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5
Q

Differential blockade

A

pain and temperature block (A-d, C fibers)
while minimizing motor block (A-a fibers)

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6
Q

Most local anesthetics have a pKa (less/greater) than 7.4

A

greater

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7
Q

How does protein binding increase DoA?

A

high affinity protein binding

bound to nerve membranes longer

increased doA

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8
Q

T/F
High protein binding increases the risk of primary organ toxicity.

A

False
binding to serum a1-acid glycoproteins and other proteins decreases the availability of free drug in the blood, reducing the potential
for toxicity in the primary organs

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9
Q

Conditions that increase free fraction of LA in the blood

A

acidosis
decreased serum protein

↑ potential for toxicity

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10
Q

Initial (inhibitory/excitatory) symptoms of toxicity are manifestations of escalating drug concentration in the CNS, specifically the ___.

A

excitatory
amygdala

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11
Q

S/S
toxicity

A

muscular twitching
visual disturbance
tinnitus
light-headedness
tongue/lip numbness
extreme anxiety
screaming
concerns about imminent death

if untreated:
generalized tonic-clonic convulsions
coma
respiratory arrest
death

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12
Q

Which is more resistant to toxicity?
CNS
CV system

A

CV system

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13
Q

circulatory collapse ratio

A

relationship between:
LA blood [ ] causing circulatory collapse
&
LA blood [ ] needed to cause convulsions

smaller ratio = ↓ interval btwn convulsions & circulatory collapse

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14
Q

Which has the smaller circulatory collapse ratio?
A) bupivacaine & ropivacaine
B) mepivacaine & lidocaine

A

smaller ratio: bupivacaine & ropivacaine
more potent, long-acting

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15
Q

Ropivacaine (Naropin)

A

-pKa of 8.2
-chemically similar to mepivacaine & bupivacaine
-pure levorotatory stereoisomer
-less cardiotoxic than bupivacaine
-“safest” long-acting

caution: CV collapse still possible

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16
Q

racemic mixture

A

combination of levorotatory and dextrorotatory molecules

17
Q

Which enantiomer tends to be less toxic?
Levorotatory
dextrorotatory

A

Levorotatory

18
Q

Which is less 🩷 toxic?
ropivacaine
bupivacaine

A

ropivacaine

preferred long-acting for PNB anesthesia for many providers

19
Q

Bupivacaine (Marcaine)

A

-pKa of 8.1
-long-acting
-longest onset
-Low [ ] : sensory block > motor (differential sensitivity)
-low-vol infiltration & spinal anesthesia well established

caution: large-volume epidural or peripheral nerve a/w prolonged resuscitation
following accidental IV injection

20
Q

Mepivacaine (Polocaine)

A

-pKa 7.6
-intermediate-acting
-rapid onset
-infiltration (similar onset to lido; longer doA)
-one of the least neurotoxic LAs
✅ high-risk cardiac pts
-block success despite suboptimal needle position
-intense motor block (shoulder surgery)

21
Q

Lidocaine (Xylocaine)

A

-pKa 7.7 (low)

distribution into the exsanguinated extremity

-low systemic toxicity
-rapid onset
-intermediate acting
-moderate W & L solubility = versatile

-caution: transient neurologic syndrome

22
Q

most common LA used for intravenous regional anesthesia

A

Lidocaine 0.5%

23
Q

Peripheral nerve blocks (PNB)
providers usually prefer ___ acting agents

A

long

so analgesia lasts well into the postop recovery period

24
Q

Regional Anesthesia
Deep sedation or general anesthesia is avoided because

A

pt indicators of toxicity or nerve injury are masked

must balance btwn pt comfort & safety during block placement

25
Q

Why add epi to LA?

A

prolongs block
reduced plasma [ ]
marker of IV injection during single injection blocks

26
Q

What changes in V/S would we see with accidental IV injection of LA w/ epi

A

↑ heart rate (≥10 beats/min)
↑ SBP (≥15 mmHg)
↓ T-wave amplitude (depression ≥ 25%),

10-15+ μg of IV epi can cause this

27
Q

addition of opioids to intrathecal LA

A

prolongs sensory anesthesia w/o prolonging recovery from ambulatory procedures

reduces LA requirements for OB

“walking epidural”

28
Q

T/F
Clonidine provides analgesia

A

True
a2-adrenoceptor agonist
analgesia via a nonopioid receptor

29
Q

Dexamethasone 8 mg as LA additive

A

enhance the duration of sensory and motor blockade

30
Q

Pretreatment with ____ to increase the seizure threshold to local anesthetic toxicity

A

benzodiazepines

31
Q

Minimize accidental IV injection by injecting ___ ml every 10-15 seconds

A

5

32
Q

If seizures occur…

A

airway maintenance
supplemental O2

propofol (25–50 mg) or thiopental (50 mg)

33
Q

Preventing IV injection:
Initial injection of test dose containing at least ___ epinephrine

A

5–15 μg

34
Q

Is this important? idk

A
35
Q

Fiber types and fxn

A