Data di Pubblicazione:
2010
Abstract:
In designing the anaesthetic plan for patients undergoing surgery, the
choice of anaesthetic agent may often appear irrelevant and the best results
obtained by the use of a technique or a drug with which the anaesthesia care
provider is familiar. Nevertheless, in those surgical procedures (cardiopulmonary
bypass, carotid surgery and cerebral aneurysm surgery) and clinical
situations (subarachnoid haemorrhage, stroke, brain trauma and postcardiac
arrest resuscitation) where protecting the CNS is a priority, the choice
of anaesthetic drug assumes a fundamental role. Treating patients with a
neuroprotective agent may be a consideration in improving overall neurological
outcome. Therefore, a clear understanding of the relative degree of
protection provided by various agents becomes essential in deciding on the
most appropriate anaesthetic treatment geared to these objectives.
This article surveys the current literature on the effects of the most commonly
used anaesthetic drugs (volatile and gaseous inhalation, and intravenous
agents) with regard to their role in neuroprotection. A systematic
search was performed in the MEDLINE, Cumulative Index to Nursing and
Allied Health Literature (CINHAL) and Cochrane Library databases using
the following keywords: ‘brain’ (with the limits ‘newborn’ or ‘infant’ or ‘child’
or ‘neonate’ or ‘neonatal’ or ‘animals’) AND ‘neurodegeneration’ or ‘apoptosis’
or ‘toxicity’ or ‘neuroprotection’ in combination with individual drug
names (‘halothane’, ‘isoflurane’, ‘desflurane’, ‘sevoflurane’, ‘nitrous oxide’,
‘xenon’, ‘barbiturates’, ‘thiopental’, ‘propofol’, ‘ketamine’). Over 600 abstracts
for articles published from January 1980 to April 2010, including
studies in animals, humans and in vitro, were examined, but just over 100 of
them were considered and reviewed for quality.
Taken as a whole, the available data appear to indicate that anaesthetic
drugs such as barbiturates, propofol, xenon and most volatile anaesthetics
(halothane, isoflurane, desflurane, sevoflurane) show neuroprotective effects
that protect cerebral tissue from adverse events – such as apoptosis, degeneration,
inflammation and energy failure – caused by chronic neurodegenerative
diseases, ischaemia, stroke or nervous system trauma. Nevertheless, in
several studies, the administration of gaseous, volatile and intravenous anaesthetics
(especially isoflurane and ketamine) was also associated with dosedependent
and exposure time-dependent neurodegenerative effects in the
developing animal brain. At present, available experimental data do not
Approval for publication Signed Date Number of amended pages returned
LEADING ARTICLE CNS Drugs 2010; 24 (11): 1-15
1172-7047/10/0011-0001/$49.95/0
ª 2010 Adis Data Information BV. All rights reserved.
AUTHOR PROOF
support the selection of any one anaesthetic agent over the others. Furthermore,
the relative benefit of one anaesthetic versus another, with regard to
neuroprotective potential, is unlikely to form a rational basis for choice. Each
drug has some undesirable adverse effects that, together with the patient’s
medical and surgical history, appear to be decisive in choosing the most suitable
anaesthetic agent for a specific situation. Moreover, it is important to
highlight that many of the studies in the literature have been conducted in
animals or in vitro; hence, results and conclusions of most of them may not be
directly applied to the clinical setting. For these reasons, and given the serious
implications for public health, we believe that further investigation – geared
mainly to clarifying the complex interactions between anaesthetic drug actions
and specific mechanisms involved in brain injury, with
Tipologia CRIS:
14.a.1 Articolo su rivista
Elenco autori:
Schifilliti, D; Grasso, G; Conti, Alfredo; Fodale, Vincenzo
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