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Michael H. Ossipov, Ph.D. Department of Pharmacology Neuromuscular Blocking Drugs
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Michael H. Ossipov, Ph.D. Department of Pharmacology Neuromuscular Blocking Drugs.

Dec 21, 2015

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Page 1: Michael H. Ossipov, Ph.D. Department of Pharmacology Neuromuscular Blocking Drugs.

Michael H. Ossipov, Ph.D.Department of Pharmacology

Neuromuscular Blocking Drugs

Page 2: Michael H. Ossipov, Ph.D. Department of Pharmacology Neuromuscular Blocking Drugs.

Neuromuscular blocking drugs• Extract of vines (Strychnos toxifera; also

Chondrodendron species)• Used by indegenous peoples of Amazon basin in

poison arrows (not orally active, so food is safe to eat)

• Brought to Europe by Sir Walter Raleigh, others• Curare-type drugs: Tubocurare (bamboo tubes),

Gourd curare, Pot curare• Brody (1811) showed curare is not lethal is animal is

ventilated• Harley (1850) used curare for tetanus and strychnine

poisoning • Harold King (1935) isolates d-tubocurarine from a

museum sample – determines structure.

Page 3: Michael H. Ossipov, Ph.D. Department of Pharmacology Neuromuscular Blocking Drugs.

Neuromuscular blocking drugs• Block synaptic transmission at the

neuromuscular junction• Affect synaptic transmission only at skeletal

muscle– Does not affect nerve transmission, action

potential generation

• Act at nicotinic acetylcholine receptor NII

Page 4: Michael H. Ossipov, Ph.D. Department of Pharmacology Neuromuscular Blocking Drugs.

Neuromuscular blocking drugs

(CH3)3N+-(CH2)6-N+(CH3)3

Hexamethonium(ganglionic)

(CH3)3N+-(CH2)10-N+(CH3)3

Decamethonium(motor endplate)

Page 5: Michael H. Ossipov, Ph.D. Department of Pharmacology Neuromuscular Blocking Drugs.

Neuromuscular blocking drugs

• Acetylcholine is released from motor neurons in discrete quanta

• Causes “all-or-none” rapid opening of Na+/K+ channels (duration 1 msec)

• Development of miniature end-plate potentials (mEPP)• Summate to form EPP and muscle action potential –

results in muscle contraction• ACh is rapidly hydrolyzed by acetylcholinesterase; no

rebinding to receptor occurs unless AChE inhibitor is present

Page 6: Michael H. Ossipov, Ph.D. Department of Pharmacology Neuromuscular Blocking Drugs.

Non-depolarizing Neuromuscular blocking drugs

• Competetive antagonist of the nicotinic 2 receptor

• Blocks ACh from acting at motor end-plate– Reduction to 70% of initial EPP needed to

prevent muscle action potential• Muscle is insensitive to added Ach, but

reactive to K+ or electrical current• AChE inhibitors increase presence of ACh,

shifting equilibrium to favor displacing the antagonist from motor end-plate

Page 7: Michael H. Ossipov, Ph.D. Department of Pharmacology Neuromuscular Blocking Drugs.

Nondepolarizing drugs: Metabolism

• Important in patients with impaired organ clearance or plasmacholinesterase deficiency

• Hepatic metabolism and renal excretion (most common)

• Atracurium, cis-atracurium:nonenzymatic (Hoffman elimination)

• Mivacurium: plasma cholinesterase

Page 8: Michael H. Ossipov, Ph.D. Department of Pharmacology Neuromuscular Blocking Drugs.

Depolarizing Neuromuscular blocking drugs• Succinylcholine, decamethonium• Bind to motor end-plate and cause

immediate and persistent depolarization• Initial contraction, fasciculations• Muscle is then in a depolarized, refractory

state• Desensitization of Ach receptors• Insensitive to K+, electrical stimulation• Paralyzes skeletal more than respiratory

muscles

Page 9: Michael H. Ossipov, Ph.D. Department of Pharmacology Neuromuscular Blocking Drugs.

Succinlycholine: Pharmacokinetics

• Fast onset (1 min) • Short duration of action (2 to 3 min)• Rapidly hydrolyzed by plasma

cholinesterase

Page 10: Michael H. Ossipov, Ph.D. Department of Pharmacology Neuromuscular Blocking Drugs.

Succinlycholine: Clinical uses

• Tracheal intubation• Indicated when rapid onset is desired

(patient with a full stomach)• Indicated when a short duration is desired

(potentially difficult airway)

Page 11: Michael H. Ossipov, Ph.D. Department of Pharmacology Neuromuscular Blocking Drugs.
Page 12: Michael H. Ossipov, Ph.D. Department of Pharmacology Neuromuscular Blocking Drugs.

Succinylcholine: Side effects

• Prolonged neuromuscular blockade– In patients lacking pseudocholinesterase

• Treat by maintaining ventilation until it wears off hours later

Page 13: Michael H. Ossipov, Ph.D. Department of Pharmacology Neuromuscular Blocking Drugs.

Succinylcholine: Phase II block• Prolonged exposure to succinlycholine• Features of nondepolarizing blockade• May take several hours to resolve• May occur in patients unable to metabolize

succinylcholine (cholinesterase defects, inhibitors)

• Harmless if recognized

Page 14: Michael H. Ossipov, Ph.D. Department of Pharmacology Neuromuscular Blocking Drugs.

Acetylcholinesterase inhibitors• Acetylcholinesterase inhibitors have

muscarinic effects– Bronchospasm– Urination– Intestinal cramping– Bradycardia

• Prevented by muscarinic blocking agent

Page 15: Michael H. Ossipov, Ph.D. Department of Pharmacology Neuromuscular Blocking Drugs.

Selection of muscle relexant:

• Onset and duration• Route of metabolism and elimination

Page 16: Michael H. Ossipov, Ph.D. Department of Pharmacology Neuromuscular Blocking Drugs.

Monitoring NM blockade• Stimulate nerve• Measure motor response

(twitch)• Depolarizing

neuromuscular blocker– Strength of twitch

• Nondepolarizing neuromuscular blocker– Strength of twitch– Decrease in strength of

twitch with repeated stimulation

Page 17: Michael H. Ossipov, Ph.D. Department of Pharmacology Neuromuscular Blocking Drugs.