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Effect of flumazenil on recovery from anesthesia and the bispectral index after sevoflurane/fentanyl general anesthesia in unpremedicated patients

Authors :
Yi Jeong Kim
Heeseung Lee
Chi Hyo Kim
Guie Yong Lee
Hee Jung Baik
Jong In Han
Source :
Korean Journal of Anesthesiology, Vol 62, Iss 1, Pp 19-23 (2012)
Publication Year :
2012
Publisher :
Korean Society of Anesthesiologists, 2012.

Abstract

BackgroundBenzodiazepines have a hypnotic/sedative effect through the inhibitory action of γ-aminobutyric acid type A receptor. Flumazenil antagonizes these effects via competitive inhibition, so it has been used to reverse the effect of benzodiazepines. Recently, flumazenil has been reported to expedite recovery from propofol/remifentanil and sevoflurane/remifentanil anesthesia without benzodiazepines. Endogenous benzodiazepine ligands (endozepines) were isolated in several tissues of individuals who had not received benzodiazepines.MethodsForty-five healthy unpremedicated patients were randomly allocated to either flumazenil or a control groups. Each patient received either a single dose of 0.3 mg of flumazenil (n = 24) or placebo (n = 21). After drug administration, various recovery parameters and bispectral index (BIS) values in the flumazenil and control groups were compared.ResultsMean time to spontaneous respiration, eye opening on verbal command, hand squeezing on verbal command, extubation and time to date of birth recollection were significantly shorter in the flumazenil group than in the control group (P = 0.004, 0.007, 0.005, 0.042, and 0.016, respectively). The BIS value was significantly higher in flumazenil group than in the control group beginning 6 min after flumazenil administration.ConclusionsAdministration of a single dose of 0.3 mg of flumazenil to healthy, unpremedicated patients at the end of sevoflurane/fentanyl anesthesia without benzodiazepines resulted in earlier emergence from anesthesia and an increase in the BIS value. This may indicate that flumazenil could have an antagonistic effect on sevoflurane or an analeptic effect through endozepine-dependent mechanisms.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
20056419 and 20057563
Volume :
62
Issue :
1
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Korean Journal of Anesthesiology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.fd2da0503f3c47be95c67b592fafdd77
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.4097/kjae.2012.62.1.19