4.6 Reprint

Serendipity: Being in the Right Place at the Right Time (Reprinted)

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ANESTHESIOLOGY
卷 136, 期 5, 页码 823-826

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LIPPINCOTT WILLIAMS & WILKINS
DOI: 10.1097/ALN.0000000000004140

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The minimum alveolar concentration (MAC) is a standard for measuring the depth of anesthesia, allowing for comparison of the pharmacologic effects of inhaled anesthetics. Rare side effects of volatile anesthetics include malignant hyperthermia, which can be monitored using blood gas devices.
Effect of Nitrous Oxide and of Narcotic Premedication on the Alveolar Concentration Required for Anesthesia. By , Eger EI II. Anesthesiology 1964; 25:302-6. Hyperthermia during Anesthesia. By Saidman LJ, Havard ES, Eger EI II. JAMA 1964; 190:1029-32. The minimum alveolar concentration (MAC) of an inhaled anesthetic preventing movement in response to a surgical incision as a measure of equipotency was invented in 1964 at the University of California, San Francisco. The principal advantage of MAC is that it allows the pharmacologic effects of inhaled anesthetics to be compared against each other at a similar anesthetic depth. Thus, if the hemodynamic effect (hypotension, decreased cardiac output) of anesthetic A is greater than that of anesthetic B, the anesthesiologist may elect to use A in patients with myocardial dysfunction. A rare side effect of a volatile anesthetic is that in some patients, malignant hyperthermia may occur with or without succinylcholine use. This phenomenon was detected in a patient in whom halothane MAC was being measured. The availability of the Severinghaus blood gas device allowed for the first ever measurement of the metabolic and respiratory acidemia that accompanies malignant hyperthermia.

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