Lecture 5 Induction: Barbiturates and Propofol Test 2 Flashcards
A drug that induces a state of calm or sleep.
Sedative
A drug that induces hypnosis or sleep.
Hypnotic
A drug that reduces anxiety and that has sedation as a side effect.
Anxiolytic
A drug that reversibly depresses the activity of the CNS.
Sedative-Hypnotics
State of drug-induced unconsciousness.
General Anesthesia
What is MAC?
Monitored Anesthesia Care- administration of a combination of sedatives and analgesics to induce a depressed level of consciousness, allowing patients to tolerate unpleasant procedures and enabling clinicians to perform procedures effectively.
AKA Procedure Sedation/ Conscious Sedation
What four groups will medication be distributed to?
What is the CO% of each group?
Vessel rich group (75%)
Muscle group (18%)
Fat (5%)
Vessel poor group (2%)
What makes up the Vessel-rich group?
Brain
Heart
Kidney
Liver
What makes up the Muscle group?
Skeletal muscle
Skin
What makes up the Vessel-poor group?
Bone
Tendon
Cartilage
What are the 5 components of General Anesthesia?
Hypnosis
Analgesia
Muscle Relaxation
Sympatholysis (hemodynamic stability)
Amnesia
What are the 4 stages of General Anesthesia?
Stage 1: Analgesia
Stage 2: Delirium
Stage 3: Surgical Anesthesia
Stage 4: Medullary Paralysis
What stage can cause death?
Stage 4
What stage consist of the lightest level of anesthesia?
Stage 1
(This is the stage of conscious sedation, the patient can still open their eyes on command, breathe normally, and protective reflexes maintained.)
Stage 1 begins with the initiation of an anesthetic agent and ends with ___________.
The patient will experience __________ and _________ depression.
Loss of consciousness
Sensory and mental
What are the 3 lower airway reflexes?
Coughing
Gagging
Swallowing
What is the upper airway reflex?
Sneezing
Stage 2 starts with the loss of consciousness to the onset of automatic rhythmicity of vital signs. This stage is characterized by excitement in what areas?
Undesired CV instability excitation
Dysconjugate ocular movements
Laryngospasm
Emesis.
What is the response to stimulation in Stage 2 like?
Exaggerated and violent
What stage will have an absence of response to surgical incision and depression in all elements of the nervous system?
Stage 3
Will have all 5 components of anesthesia hypnosis, analgesia, muscle relaxation, sympatholysis, and amnesia
What stage is associated with cessation of spontaneous respiration and medullary cardiac reflex? What are the symptoms of this stage?
Stage 4 (over anesthesia)
All reflexes are absent
Flaccid Paralysis
Marked Hypotension with w/ irregular pulse.
May lead to death
How can you tell if a patient is out from stage 2 to stage 1 for an awake extubation?
Patient is about to follow commands
What is the benefit of using a barbiturate (thiopental) vs. diethyl ether?
Diethyl ether is slow, unpleasant, and more dangerous for induction of general anesthesia. Barbiturates can cover stages 1 to stage 3 in as little as 2 minutes.
Why are barbiturates no longer used in the U.S.?
Thiopental is now part of the lethal injection cocktail for capital punishment.