General anaesthetics as 'awakening agents'? Re-appraising the evidence for suggested 'pressure reversal' of anaesthesia.

IF 2.4 4区 医学 Q3 PHARMACOLOGY & PHARMACY
Ben M George, Jaideep J Pandit
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Increasing ambient pressure has been suggested to reverse general anaesthesia and provides support for the 'lipid theory'. Anaesthetic dissolution into cell membranes is said to cause their expansion to a critical volume. This triggers a sequence of events as basis of a unitary theory of anaesthestic mechanism. Pressure is argued to restore membrane volume to below critical level, reversing this process. We wished to review the original literature to assess internal consistency within and across papers, and to consider if alternative interpretations were possible. A literature search yielded 31 relevant 'pressure reversal' papers for narrative review, and 8 papers that allowed us to re-plot original data more consistently as 'dose-response' curves for the anaesthetics examined. Original studies were heterogenous for end-points, pressure ranges, species, and agents. Pressure effects were inconsistent, with narcosis at certain pressures and excitation at others, influenced by carrier gas (e.g., nitrogen vs helium). Pressure reversal (a right- or downward-shift on the re-plotted dose-response curves) was evident, but only in some species and at certain pressures and anaesthetic concentrations. However, even more striking was a novel 'awakening' effect of anaesthetics: i.e., anaesthetics reversed the narcotic effect of pressure, but this was limited to certain pressures at generally low anaesthetic concentrations. Contrary to the established view, 'pressure reversal' is not a universal phenomenon. The awakening effect of anaesthetics - described here for the first time - has equal evidence to support it, within the same literature, and is something that cannot be fully explained. Pressure cannot meaningfully be used to gain insight into anaesthetic mechanisms because of its heterogenous, non-specific and unpredictable effects on biological systems.

全麻作为“唤醒剂”?重新评估麻醉“压力逆转”的证据。
增加环境压力被认为可以逆转全身麻醉,并为“脂质理论”提供支持。据说麻醉剂溶解到细胞膜中会使细胞膜膨胀到临界体积。这触发了一系列事件,作为麻醉机制统一理论的基础。压力被认为可以将膜体积恢复到临界水平以下,从而逆转这一过程。我们希望回顾原始文献,以评估论文内部和论文之间的一致性,并考虑是否可能有其他解释。通过文献检索,我们获得了31篇相关的“压力逆转”论文,用于叙述性回顾,还有8篇论文允许我们将原始数据重新绘制成更一致的“剂量-反应”曲线。最初的研究在终点、压力范围、物种和药物方面存在异质性。压力效应不一致,受载气(如氮气和氦气)的影响,在一定压力下麻醉,在其他压力下兴奋。压力反转(在重新绘制的剂量-反应曲线上向右或向下移动)是明显的,但仅在某些物种和某些压力和麻醉浓度下。然而,更引人注目的是麻醉药的一种新的“唤醒”效应:即麻醉药逆转了压力的麻醉作用,但这仅限于一定压力下的低麻醉浓度。与既定观点相反,“压力逆转”并不是一种普遍现象。麻醉剂的唤醒效应——在这里是第一次被描述——在同样的文献中有同样的证据支持它,并且是一些不能完全解释的东西。由于压力对生物系统的影响具有异质性、非特异性和不可预测性,因此不能有效地利用压力来深入了解麻醉机制。
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来源期刊
Clinical and Experimental Pharmacology and Physiology
Clinical and Experimental Pharmacology and Physiology PHARMACOLOGY & PHARMACY-PHYSIOLOGY
自引率
0.00%
发文量
128
期刊介绍: Clinical and Experimental Pharmacology and Physiology is an international journal founded in 1974 by Mike Rand, Austin Doyle, John Coghlan and Paul Korner. Our focus is new frontiers in physiology and pharmacology, emphasizing the translation of basic research to clinical practice. We publish original articles, invited reviews and our exciting, cutting-edge Frontiers-in-Research series’.
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