Local anaesthetics Flashcards
What are local anaesthetics?
Drugs which reversibly blocks neuronal conduction when applied locally
What three main regions do all local anaesthetics have?
Aromatic region
Basic amino acid side chain
Ester or Amide bond
What is the basis for classification of local anaesthetics?
Type of bond that links the aromatic group and basic amino acid side chain:
Ester- e.g. cocaine
Amide- Lidocaine
Why is benzocaine the odd one out?
Doesn’t have a tertiary amine group, it just has an alkyl group- means that it is relatively weak but highly lipid soluble
How do all local anaesthetics exist?
As weak bases
When can a local anaesthetic pass through the connective tissue sheath and through the axon membrane?
When it is unionised
When can a cationic local anaesthetic bind with sodium channel?
Only with the sodium channel when it is open because the binding site is inside the channel
What effect do local anaesthetics have once inside?
They stereochemically inhibit the passage of sodium ions from the outside to the inside of the cell
What is the blockage of sodium passage by local anaesthetic known as?
Hydrophilic pathway- main mechanism of action
The hydrophilic pathway gives rise to the use dependency of local anaesthetics, what is use dependency?
The more active the cell is, the more frequently its sodium channel will be open and more it will be blocked
Why is use dependency a useful feature?
It gives a greater degree of selectivity for nociceptive neurones- when conducting pain, they fire more rapidly
What is the other mechanism of action of local anaesthetics?
The hydrophobic pathway- local anaesthetic passes into the membrane of the neurone in the unionised form. Some highly lipid soluble local anaesthetics can drop straight into the sodium channel. They then become ionised in the sodium channel and block the channel
What are the effects of local anaesthetics?
Prevent generation and conduction of action potentials
Do not influence resting membrane potential
Channel gating- bind more to inactivated state of sodium channel and hold it causing analgesic effect because it increases refractory period and reduces activation and propagation of action potentials
Surface tension
What is the selectivity block of local anaesthetics?
They have a preference for small diameter axons which is good because A-delta and C-neurones have small diameter axons. They tend to block non-myelinated axons
What does the fact all local anaesthetics are weak bases influence?
It means that at physiological pH, a relatively small proportion of drug is unionised and can gain access to the neurones
Infected tissue tends to be more difficult to anaesthetise because it is more acidic