Inhalant Anesthesia Flashcards

1
Q

Why is inhalant anesthesia used?

A
  • predictable effects (narcosis, muscle relaxation, no analgesia)
  • rapid adjustment of anesthetic depth
  • minimal metabolism
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2
Q

What is saturated vapor pressure?

A

the maximum administration percentage of vapor

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3
Q

What is the blood-gas partition coefficient?

A

describes the amount of anesthetic in the blood vs. alveolar gas at equal partial pressure

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4
Q

What are the features of low blood-gas PC?

A
  • less anesthetic dissolved in blood at equal partial pressure (more in alveoli)
  • affects brain faster
  • short induction and recovery
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5
Q

What are the features of a high blood-gas PC?

A
  • more anesthetic dissolved in blood at equal partial pressure (less in alveoli)
  • affects the brain slower
  • long induction and recovery
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6
Q

How can you increase gas delivery to alveoli?

A
increase inspired anesthetic concentration
- increase vaporizer setting
- increase fresh gas flow
increase alveolar ventilation
- increase minute ventilation
- decrease dead space ventilation
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7
Q

How can you decrease removal of gas from alveoli?

A
  • decrease blood solubility of anesthetic
  • decrease cardiac output
  • decrease alveolar-venous anesthetic gradient
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8
Q

What is MAC?

A

minimum alveolar concentration of an anesthetic that prevents movement in 50% of patients exposed to a noxious stimulant

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9
Q

What are the MAC values for Isoflurane and Sevoflurane in the dog?

A

Iso% 1.3

Sevo% 2.3

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10
Q

What causes an increase in MAC?

A
  • hyperthermia
  • hypernatremia
  • drugs causing CNS stimulation
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11
Q

What causes a decrease in MAC?

A
  • hypothermia
  • hyponatremia
  • drugs causing CNS depression
  • MAP < 50 mmHg
  • PaO2 < 40 mmHg
  • PaCO2 > 95 mmHg
  • pregnancy
  • increased age
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12
Q

What are the cardiovascular effects of volatile anesthetics?

A
  • decreased CO, BP, systemic vascular resistance, and contractility
  • no change/increased heart rate
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13
Q

What are the respiratory effects of volatile anesthetics?

A
  • decreased ventilation
  • respiratory arrest at 1.5-3 MAC
  • bronchodilation
  • Des and Iso have irritating odor
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14
Q

What are the neurologic effects of volatile anesthetics?

A
  • increased ICP at > 1 MAC
  • decreased cerebral metabolic rate
  • immobility
  • suppress seizure activity
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15
Q

What are the renal effects of volatile anesthetics?

A
  • decrease GFR and renal blood flow

- Sevo produces compound A

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16
Q

What are the hepatic effects of volatile anesthetics?

A
  • reduce liver blood flow and O2 delivery

- Halothane can cause hepatotoxicity

17
Q

What is malignant hyperthermia?

A
  • myopathy occurring in genetically predisposed animals from exposure to inhalant anesthesia
  • uncontrolled muscle contractions lead to hyperthermia, resulting in death
18
Q

What anesthetic-related complications can occur?

A
  • hypotension
  • hypoventilation
  • hypothermia
19
Q

What values of MAP indicate hypotension in small and large animals?

A

Sm: <60 mmHg
Lg: <70 mmHg

20
Q

What problems can occur with a closed pop-off?

A
  • increased pressure in lungs, decreased venous return, decreased CO
  • clinical signs: apnea, bradycardia, fading Doppler signal leading to pulmonary arrest