Anesthesia Pharmacology: Local Anesthetics
Local Anesthetic Side-Effects /Toxicities and Neurotoxicity
Primary side effects
Allergic reactions
Systemic toxicity
Secondary to high plasma/tissue local anesthetic concentrations
Manifestation:
Seizures
Frequency: 1-4/1000 cases
Bupivacaine (Marcaine) -- local anesthetic most likely to cause seizures
Allergic reactions are considered rare occurrence (< 1% of local anesthetic adverse reactions due to allergic mechanism.)
Higher-risk: ester-type local anesthetics (those which are metabolized to p-aminobenzoic acid-related compounds)
Allergic reaction following local anesthetic administration may be caused by preservatives (methylparaben or related structures) included in the preparation (preservatives are structurally similar to p-aminobenzoic acid).
Antibody production may have been previously induced by the preservative and is therefore not a reaction to the local anesthetic.
May be due to common metabolite profile (i.e. a structure similar to para-aminobenzoic acid.)
No cross sensitivity between ester vs. amide local anesthetic classes
Patient with allergy to an ester local anesthetic drug may receive an amide local anesthetic
The anesthetic agent thought to not produce an allergic reaction should not have preservatives because it is possible that the preservative is the allergen.
Basis/evidence for local anesthetic allergies
. Clinical history, intradermal testing.
Suggestive:
Rash, urticaria, laryngeal edema, possible hypotension, bronchospasm.
Caution: hypotension with syncope/tachycardia following epinephrine-containing local anesthetic injection; accidental intravascular injection.
Intradermal testing: must use preservative-free drug.
Local Anesthetic Systemic Toxicity
Overview
Systemic Toxicity Cause: Excessively high plasma local anesthetic concentration
Plasma concentration -- determinants
Rate of entry into systemic circulation balanced by redistribution to tissue sites and clearance
Most common cause of toxic plasma local anesthetic concentrations --
Accidental direct intravascular injection during peripheral nerve block or epidural anesthesia
Other cause of toxic plasma levels: -- excessive absorption from injection site (no intravascular injection)
Extent of systemic absorption: dependencies
Initial dose of administered
Injection site vascularity
Whether or not epinephrine was used to provide local vasoconstriction
Properties of the drug itself
CNS Toxicity-local anesthetics
Symptom development:
Tongue and circumoral numbness (low concentration)
CNS changes with local anesthetic entering the brain
Initial symptoms: tinnitus, vertigo, restlessness
Subsequent symptoms: slurred speech and skeletal muscle fasciculation (muscle twitching: often immediately precedes seizures)
Tonic-clonic seizures
Presentation: generalized seizure (tonic general muscular contractions) with alternating contractions and relaxations.
Duration: one- two minutes
Consciousness: Loss of Consciousness
Factors influencing CNS toxicity
Plasma concentration-- specific drug dependent
Lidocaine (Xylocaine), mepivacaine (Carbocaine), prilocaine (Citanest): CNS effects (5-10 ug/ml):
Bupivacaine (Marcaine): CNS effects [seizures] (4-5 ug/ml)
Rate of injection -- (i.e. rate of rise of serum concentration): may be more important than total amount of drug injected
Lidocaine (Xylocaine) -- must also consider active metabolites, e.g.monoethylglycinexylidide, which may contribute to additive toxicity with lidocaine (Xylocaine) following epidural administration
Inverse relationship between PaCO2 and local anesthetic seizure thresholds (possibly related to variation in cerebral blood flow and drug delivery)
Hyperkalemia by promoting depolarization increases local anesthetic toxicity
Hypokalemia by promoting membrane hyperpolarization reduces local anesthetic toxicity
Increased (probably) lidocaine (Xylocaine) neurotoxicity in patients treated with mexiletine (Mexitil) during perioperative time frame.
Assure adequate ventilation with oxygen
Rapid onset of arteriole hypoxemia and metabolic acidosis
Add supplemental oxygen when local anesthetic toxicity first appears
Seizure suppression
IV midazolam (Versed) or diazepam (Valium)
Overview -- Neurotoxicity as a consequence of local anesthetic injection into subarachnoid or epidural spaces
Effects:
Groin numbness
Long-lasting, isolated myotomal (muscle segment) weakness
Cauda equina syndrome
Subarachnoid-space injections:
Transient radicular irritation
Permanent neurological injury following regional anesthesia: rare
Transient Radicular Irritation
Anatomical Location: lumbosacral nerves
Manifestation: moderate/severe lower back, buttocks, posterior thigh pain
time to onset: by 24 hours following spinal anesthesia complete recovery
Type of pain (delayed onset): neural inflammatory
Pain treatment: if severe, opioids
Time to recovery: within one-week
Pharmacological issues:
Transient radicular irritation -- may not be dependent on anesthetic concentration {frequency comparable following several lidocaine (Xylocaine) concentrations}
Spinal anesthesia with tetracaine (pontocaine): reduced incidence of transient radicular irritation relative to lidocaine (Xylocaine)
Transient ischemia due to lengthened exposure to local anesthetic as a result of concurrent epinephrine or phenylephrine (Neo-Synephrine) use {in the anesthetic solution} may contribute to transient neurological symptoms
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Definition: injuries (diffuse) across lumbosacral plexus causing:
Sensory anesthesia
Bowel and bladder sphincter dysfunction
Paraplegia
Circumstances of clinical occurrence:
Microcatheters (28 gauge) delivering hyperbaric 5% lidocaine (Xylocaine) may cause nonhomogeneous local anesthetic distribution-- pooling of high anesthetic concentration on stretched nerves (lithotomy position).
Following intrathecal lidocaine (Xylocaine) [100 mg 5% lidocaine (Xylocaine), 25-gauge needle]
Intended epidural anesthesia
Anterior Spinal Artery Syndrome
Manifestation: lower-extremity paresis (variable sensory deficit following neural blockade resolution)
Possible mechanisms
Thrombosis
Anterior artery spasm
Hypotension/vasoconstrictor drugs
Possible Predisposing conditions:
Advanced age
Peripheral vascular disease
Differential diagnosis with presenting symptoms similar symptoms to that caused by:
Epidural abscess-mediated or hematoma-mediated spinal cord compression.
Primary Reference: Stoelting, R.K., "Local Anesthetics", in Pharmacology and Physiology in Anesthetic Practice, Lippincott-Raven Publishers, 1999, pp 158-181.
Miller, R.D., Local Anesthesia, in Basic and Clinical Pharmacology, (Katzung, B. G., ed) Appleton-Lange, 1998, pp 425-433.
White, P. F. "Anesthesia Drug Manual", W.B. Saunders Company, 1996.