瑞芬太尼
麻醉
医学
通风(建筑)
呼吸分钟容积
氯胺酮
安慰剂
呼吸系统
交叉研究
呼吸频率
类阿片
内科学
心率
异丙酚
血压
受体
病理
替代医学
工程类
机械工程
作者
Kelly Jonkman,Eva van Rijnsoever,Erik Olofsen,Leon Aarts,Elise Sarton,Monique van Velzen,Marieke Niesters,Albert Dahan
标识
DOI:10.1016/j.bja.2018.02.021
摘要
BackgroundOpioids can produce life-threatening respiratory depression. This study tested whether subanaesthetic doses of esketamine stimulate breathing in an established human model of opioid-induced respiratory depression.MethodsIn a study with a randomised, double blind, placebo controlled, crossover design, 12 healthy, young volunteers of either sex received a dose escalating infusion of esketamine (cumulative dose 40 mg infused in 1 h) on top of remifentanil-induced respiratory depression. A population pharmacokinetic-pharmacodynamic analysis was performed with sites of drug action at baseline ventilation, ventilatory CO2-chemosensitivity, or both.ResultsRemifentanil reduced isohypercapnic ventilation (end-tidal PCO2 6.5 kPa) by approximately 40% (from 20 to 12 litre min−1) in esketamine and placebo arms of the study, through an effect on baseline ventilation and ventilatory CO2 sensitivity. The reduction in ventilation was related to a remifentanil effect on ventilatory CO2 sensitivity (~39%) and on baseline ventilation (~61%). Esketamine increased breathing through an exclusive stimulatory effect on ventilatory CO2 sensitivity. The remifentanil concentration that reduced ventilatory CO2 sensitivity by 50% (C50) was doubled at an esketamine concentration of 127 (84-191) ng ml−1 [median (interquartile range)]; the esketamine effect was rapid and driven by plasma pharmacokinetics. Placebo had no systematic effect on opioid-induced respiratory depression.ConclusionsEsketamine effectively countered remifentanil-induced respiratory depression, an effect that was attributed to an increase in remifentanil-reduced ventilatory CO2 chemosensitivity.
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