Local anesthetics Flashcards
What are the three structural components of cocaine and its derivatives?
(1) Aromatic portion
(2) Ester linkage
(3) Charged portion
What are characteristics of the lipophylic portion of cocaine derivatives?
(1) Must be aromatic moiety
(2) Greater lipid solubility instills greater potency, longer duration of action, and greater toxicity
(3) Partitions drug into lipid, away from sites of metabolism
(4) Receptor sites have lipophylic nature
What are characteristics of the hydrophyllic portion of cocaine derivatives?
(1) Secondary or tertiary amines with pKa 8-9
(2) Active form is cation
(3) Only uncharged drug has access to site of action, so extracellular pH influences therapeutic effectiveness
What do local buffers do to local anesthetics?
Local buffers increase concentration of unionized form of drug, allowing it to enter the cell
What does repeated injection of local anesthetic result in?
(1) Depletion of local buffer
2) Tacchyphylaxis (diminishing effectiveness of drug
How does infection impact local anesthetic?
Infected areas tend to have lower pH, reducing concentration of unionized local anesthetic and reducing absorption
What are the characteristics of ester local anesthetics?
(1) Ester linkage hydrolyzed by plasma esterases (2) resulting in short plasma half life
(3) Breakdown products are p-aminobenzoic acid derivatives, which are (4) allergenic amides
What are the characteristics of amide local anesthetics?
(1) Duration of action is determined by liver N-dealkylation and hydrolysis of amide linkage
(2) Allergic reactions rare
What are the ester local anesthetics?
(1) Cocaine
(2) Procaine
(3) Tetracaine
(4) Benzocaine
What are the amide local anesthetics?
(1) Lidocaine
(2) Mepivacaine
(3) Bupivacaine
(4) Etidocaine
(5) Prilocaine
(6) Ropivacaine
Where do local anesthetics act?
α subunit of sodium channels
How do local anesthetics reach their target?
(1) Isoleucine prevents local anesthetic from accessing target from extracellular side of pore
(2) Local anesthetic binds tyrosine in S6 of domain 4 in intracellular half of pore, blocking the channel
What are consequences of Na channel block?
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(1) Increased action potential threshold
(2) Reduced rate of action potential rise
(3) Decreased conduction velocity
(4) Decreased frequency of neuronal conduction and increased refractory period (reducing pain)
(5) Frequency- or use-dependent block
(6) Complete conduction block
What is use-dependent block of Na current?
Effect of local anesthetics:
At higher action potential frequencies, current generated decreases
What nerve properties increase sensitivity to block by local anesthetic?
(1) Small diameter
(2) Lack of myelination
(3) Low conduction velocity