Most frequent reasons for using anticholinergic agents for preoperative medication:
Do most currently used inhaled or injected anesthetic stimulate significant upper airway secretions?
Anesthetic agent which may, because it causes excessive secretions, require the use of an antisialagogue.
More potent antisialagogue: scopolamine or atropine?
More useful when antisialagogue effects and sedation are both required as part of preoperative preparations: atropine or scopolamine?
More potent as an antisialagogue: glycopyrrolate (Robinul) or atropine?
Within the preoperative timeframe, when should an anticholinergic agent be administered?
Antisialagogue drug which is a quaternary amine (always positively charged, independent of pH)
Most reasonable Route of Administration of anticholinergic drugs used for the purpose of blocking/attenuating reflex bradycardia:
Anticholinergic drug most likely to induce central nervous system toxicity, in particular central anticholinergic syndrome:
Antidote for CNS toxicity due to muscarinic cholinergic receptor blockade, secondary to scopolamine overdosage, for example manifested as central anticholinergic syndrome:
Drug Classification of physostigmine (Antilirium)
Ineffective anticholinesterases for management of central anticholinergic syndrome
Effect of anticholinergic drugs on lower esophageal sphincter tone:
Ocular effects of anticholinergic drugs, e.g.atropine or scopolamine:
Effects of anticholinergic drugs on body temperature:
Mechanism by which anticholinergic drugs affect body temperature.