mivacurium has been researched along with Liver-Failure* in 2 studies
1 review(s) available for mivacurium and Liver-Failure
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[New muscle relaxants].
Mivacurium is a short-acting nondepolarising muscle relaxant of the benzylisoquinoline type undergoing rapid breakdown by plasma cholinesterase. With 2.5 fold ED95, tracheal intubation can be accomplished within 2-3 min following injection. The ensuing DUR 25% (i.e. time from injection to 25% recovery of control twitch tension) is three times as long as with succinylcholine and about half as long as with equipotent doses of atracurium and vecuronium. The principal side effects of mivacurium are facial flushing and a transient fall in blood pressure due to a moderate histamine release following doses of 3-4 times the ED95. In patients with end stage liver or renal disease as well as in patients with atypical plasma cholinesterase the duration of action of mivacurium is prolonged. Rocuronium is a steroidal non-depolarising neuromuscular blocking agent chemically related to vecuronium. Compared with the latter, rocuronium is less potent, has a shorter onset of action, and no cumulative effects. Adequate intubating conditions are achieved within 60 to 90 s after i.v. injection of twice the ED95. Its elimination from the blood occurs primarily via liver uptake, while renal elimination is about 10 to 30%. Slight vagolytic effects are reported following injection of 0.6 mg/kg rocuronium, while histamine release is unlikely to occur. Atracurium is a mixture of ten stereoisomers. One of them, cis-atracurium, is five times as potent as the chiral mixture while having a similar pharmacodynamic and kinetic profile. It does not cause significant histamine release or clinically relevant cardiovascular effects at doses up to 8 times the ED95. Laudanosine release seems to be less with cis-atracurium than with atracurium. Topics: Androstanols; Anesthesia, Endotracheal; Anesthesia, General; Atracurium; Biotransformation; Dose-Response Relationship, Drug; Humans; Isoquinolines; Liver Failure; Metabolic Clearance Rate; Mivacurium; Neuromuscular Nondepolarizing Agents; Preanesthetic Medication; Renal Insufficiency; Rocuronium | 1996 |
1 other study(ies) available for mivacurium and Liver-Failure
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Pharmacokinetics of mivacurium in normal patients and in those with hepatic or renal failure.
We have determined the pharmacokinetics and duration of action of a bolus dose of mivacurium (0.15 mg kg-1) during isoflurane and nitrous oxide anaesthesia in nine patients with normal renal and liver function, nine patients undergoing cadaveric kidney transplantation and nine patients undergoing cadaveric liver transplantation. Total plasma concentrations of mivacurium were measured for 2.5 h after administration using a high-pressure liquid chromatographic assay. Plasma concentration vs time data for what were presumed to be the two active mivacurium isomers were analysed by a non-compartmental method based on statistical moments. Neuromuscular block was assessed by measuring the electromyographic evoked response of the adductor pollicis muscle to train-of-four stimulation of the ulnar nerve. The mean time to recovery of 25% neuromuscular transmission, T25, was greater in the patients with liver failure (57.2 min) than in control patients (18.7 min). The volume of distribution at steady rate (Vdss) was comparable in the three groups. Patients with impaired liver function had significantly longer mean residence time and smaller plasma clearance than did patients with renal failure or control patients. There were significant negative correlations between plasma cholinesterase activity and both T25 (r = 0.79) and mean residence time (r = 0.62). Topics: Adult; Cholinesterases; Female; Humans; Isomerism; Isoquinolines; Kidney; Kidney Failure, Chronic; Liver; Liver Failure; Male; Middle Aged; Mivacurium; Neuromuscular Junction; Neuromuscular Nondepolarizing Agents; Synaptic Transmission; Time Factors | 1992 |