Maturation decreases ethanol minimum alveolar anesthetic concentration in mice as previously demonstrated in rats: There is no species difference

被引:9
作者
Fang, ZX
Ionescu, P
Gong, D
Kendig, J
Harris, A
Eger, EI
机构
[1] UNIV CALIF SAN FRANCISCO,DEPT ANESTHESIA,SAN FRANCISCO,CA 94143
[2] STANFORD UNIV,PALO ALTO,CA 94304
[3] UNIV COLORADO,DEPT PHARMACOL,DENVER,CO 80202
关键词
D O I
10.1097/00000539-199707000-00029
中图分类号
R614 [麻醉学];
学科分类号
100217 ;
摘要
The potency of conventional inhaled anesthetics increases with maturation: the 50% effective dose (minimum alveolar anesthetic concentration [MAC]) for conventional inhaled anesthetics in the neonatal rat or human exceeds MAC in the young adult. This increase also applies to ethanol in rats tested using MAC as the measure of anesthesia. However, the converse appears to be true for studies in mice assessed with the reflex; that is, adult mice are six times more resistant than neonates to the effects of ethanol. These disparate findings imply that maturation in rats and mice may produce opposing changes in the quantity or sensitivity of one or more receptors that mediate the actions of anesthetics that lead to the anesthetic state. Such a finding would be important for two reasons. First, both rodents are widely used in studies of anesthetic effects, and, thus a species-dependent divergence in anesthetic effects has immediate experimental implications. Second, confirmation of such a species difference would supply an opportunity to test which receptors might be crucial to anesthetic mechanisms. Accordingly, we investigated whether maturation decreased ethanol potency in mice, using MAC as the measure of anesthesia. Applying standard techniques, we tested MAC for ethanol in 15 CF-1 mice aged 10 days (6-8.5 g) and in 13 mice aged 77-84 days (34-39 g). MAC decreased with maturation, and the decrease was indistinguishable from that found in our previous studies of rats.
引用
收藏
页码:160 / 163
页数:4
相关论文
共 21 条
[1]   EXAGGERATED ANESTHETIC REQUIREMENTS IN THE PREFERENTIALLY ANESTHETIZED BRAIN [J].
ANTOGNINI, JF ;
SCHWARTZ, K .
ANESTHESIOLOGY, 1993, 79 (06) :1244-1249
[2]   SELECTIVE EFFECTS OF KETAMINE ON AMINO ACID-MEDIATED PATHWAYS IN NEONATAL RAT SPINAL-CORD [J].
BROCKMEYER, DM ;
KENDIG, JJ .
BRITISH JOURNAL OF ANAESTHESIA, 1995, 74 (01) :79-84
[3]  
DEADY JE, 1981, ANESTH ANALG, V60, P380
[4]  
EGER EI, 1987, ANESTH ANALG, V66, P974
[5]   MINIMUM ALVEOLAR ANESTHETIC CONCENTRATION - A STANDARD OF ANESTHETIC POTENCY [J].
EGER, EI ;
SAIDMAN, LJ ;
BRANDSTATER, B .
ANESTHESIOLOGY, 1965, 26 (6P1) :756-+
[6]   TEMPERATURE DEPENDENCE OF HALOTHANE AND CYCLOPROPANE ANESTHESIA IN DOGS - CORRELATION WITH SOME THEORIES OF ANESTHETIC ACTION [J].
EGER, EI ;
SAIDMAN, LJ ;
BRANDSTATER, B .
ANESTHESIOLOGY, 1965, 26 (6P1) :764-+
[7]   Anesthetic potencies of n-alkanols: Results of additivity and solubility studies suggest a mechanism of action similar to that for conventional inhaled anesthetics [J].
Fang, Z ;
Ionescu, P ;
Chortkoff, BS ;
Kandel, L ;
Sonner, J ;
Laster, MJ ;
Eger, EI .
ANESTHESIA AND ANALGESIA, 1997, 84 (05) :1042-1048
[8]   Maturation decreases ethanol minimum alveolar anesthetic concentration (MAC) more than desflurane MAC in rats [J].
Fang, ZX ;
Gong, D ;
Ionescu, P ;
Laster, MJ ;
Eger, EI ;
Kendig, J .
ANESTHESIA AND ANALGESIA, 1997, 84 (04) :852-858
[9]   SELECTIVE EFFECTS OF ALFENTANIL ON NOCICEPTIVE-RELATED NEUROTRANSMISSION IN NEONATAL RAT SPINAL-CORD [J].
FENG, J ;
KENDIG, JJ .
BRITISH JOURNAL OF ANAESTHESIA, 1995, 74 (06) :691-696
[10]   THE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN ADDUCTOR POLLICIS TWITCH TENSION AND CORE, SKIN, AND MUSCLE TEMPERATURE DURING NITROUS OXIDE ISOFLURANCE ANESTHESIA IN HUMANS [J].
HEIER, T ;
CALDWELL, JE ;
SESSLER, DI ;
KITTS, JB ;
MILLER, RD .
ANESTHESIOLOGY, 1989, 71 (03) :381-384