4.6 Article Proceedings Paper

Isoffurane depresses baroreflex control of heart rate in decerebrate rats

Journal

ANESTHESIOLOGY
Volume 96, Issue 5, Pages 1214-1222

Publisher

LIPPINCOTT WILLIAMS & WILKINS
DOI: 10.1097/00000542-200205000-00026

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Funding

  1. NHLBI NIH HHS [HL-58760] Funding Source: Medline

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Background: Isoflurane inhibits baroreflex control of heart rate (HR) by poorly understood mechanisms. The authors examined whether suprapontine central nervous system cardiovascular regulatory sites are required for anesthetic depression. Methods: The effects of isoflurane (I and 2 rat minimum alveolar concentration [MAC]) on the baroreflex control of HR were determined in sham intact and midcollicular-transected decerebrate rats. intravenous phenylephrine (0.2-12 mug/kg) and nitroprusside (1-60 mug/kg) were used to measure HE responses to peak changes in mean arterial pressure (MAII). Sigmoidal logistic curve fits to HR-MAP data assessed baroreflex sensitivity (HR/MAP), HR range, lower and upper HR plateau, and MAP at half the HR range (BP50). Four groups (two brain Intact and two decerebrate) were studied before, during, and after isoflurane. To assess sympathetic and vagal contributions to BR baroreflex, beta-adrenoceptor (1 mg/kg atenolol) or muscarinic (0.5 mg/kg methyl atropine) antagonists were administered systemically. Results: Decerebration did not alter resting WAY and HR or baroreflex parameters. Isoflurane depressed baroreflex slope and HR range In brain-intact and decerebrate rats. in both groups, 1 MAC reduced HR range by depressing peak reflex tachycardia. Maximal reflex bradycardia during Increases in blood pressure was relatively preserved. Atenolol during I MAC did not alter maximum reflex tachycardia. In contrast, atropine during I MAC fully blocked reflex bradycardia. Therefore, 1 MAC predominantly depresses sympathetic components of HR baroreflex. Isoflurane at 2 MAC depressed both fill plateaus and decreased BP50 in both groups. Conclusions: Isoflurane depresses HR baroreflex control by actions that do not require suprapontine central nervous system sites. Isoflurane actions seem to inhibit HR baroreflex primarily by the sympathetic nervous system.

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