1. Evaluation of a closed-loop muscle relaxation control system.
- Author
-
Eleveld DJ, Proost JH, and Wierda JMKH
- Subjects
- Aged, Algorithms, Androstanols administration & dosage, Automation, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Monitoring, Intraoperative, Neuromuscular Nondepolarizing Agents administration & dosage, Rocuronium, Anesthesia, Anesthesiology instrumentation, Muscle Relaxation drug effects, Muscle, Skeletal drug effects
- Abstract
Automatic muscle relaxation control may reduce anesthesiologists' workload freeing them for other patient care requirements. In this report we describe a muscle relaxation controller designed for routine clinical application using rocuronium and the train-of-four count. A muscle relaxation monitor (TOF Watch SX) was connected to a laptop computer running a controller algorithm program that communicates with a syringe pump to form a closed-loop muscle relaxation system. The control algorithm uses proportional-integral and lookup table components and is designed to avoid the usability restrictions of existing controllers. The controller is optimized using an objective method to avoid the uncertainties of ''hand-crafted'' controller algorithms. Controller target was train-of-four count 1 or 2 and controller performance was evaluated in 15 patients. During 39 hours of closed-loop control, 96.1% of all twitches recorded were in the target range. Average rocuronium infusion rate was 0.36 mg.kg(-1).h(-1) (sd 0.18 mg.kg(-1).h(-1)). We show that the controller remains useful even in the presence of disturbances that can arise in routine clinical conditions. The muscle relaxation controller maintained the target train-of-four count values and may serve as a basis for the design of hardware and user interfaces for closed-loop muscle relaxation control in clinical conditions.
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF