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The Influence of Adjuvants Used in Regional Anesthesia on Lidocaine-Induced Neurotoxicity In Vitro

Authors :
Robert Werdehausen
S. Braun
Patrick Küry
Markus F. Stevens
Inge Bauer
Markus W. Hollmann
Henning Hermanns
David Kremer
Other departments
ACS - Amsterdam Cardiovascular Sciences
AII - Amsterdam institute for Infection and Immunity
Anesthesiology
Other Research
Source :
Regional anesthesia and pain medicine, 36(5), 436-443. Lippincott Williams and Wilkins
Publication Year :
2011
Publisher :
BMJ, 2011.

Abstract

Background: Neurotoxic properties of local anesthetics can rarely lead to irreversible neuronal damage as in cauda equina syndrome. Clinically, local anesthetics are often combined with adjuvants to improve or prolong the anesthetic effect, whereas the impact of such adjuvants on lidocaine-induced apoptosis is unclear. Therefore, we investigated the influence of different adjuvants on the neurotoxicity of lidocaine. Methods: Human neuroblastoma cells and primary rat astrocytes were incubated for 24 hrs with lidocaine at a toxic concentration alone and in combination with morphine, sufentanil, clonidine, epinephrine, neostigmine, ketamine, and midazolam. Subsequently, the rates of cell death and early apoptosis were measured by flow cytometry in neuroblastoma cells, whereas astrocyte viability was analyzed by mitochondrial activity assay. In addition, isobolograms were calculated to describe the additive effects of lidocaine with ketamine or midazolam, respectively. Results: Coadministration of lidocaine with sufentanil, clonidine, epinephrine, and neostigmine did not alter the rates of cell death compared with cells treated with lidocaine alone. Morphine improved the viability of astrocytes only at concentrations beyond those occurring clinically. In contrast, coincubation of lidocaine with ketamine or midazolam led to significantly increased rates of cell death. The combined toxicity of ketamine and lidocaine was additive, whereas the combined toxicity of midazolam and lidocaine was subadditive. Conclusions: Sufentanil, clonidine, epinephrine, and neostigmine do not influence the neurotoxicity of lidocaine in vitro. Morphine may have some cytoprotective effect at concentrations greater than those seen intrathecally in humans. In contrast, ketamine and midazolam increase the neurotoxicity of lidocaine in vitro, presumably by additive induction of mitochondrial apoptosis.

Details

ISSN :
10987339
Volume :
36
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Regional Anesthesia and Pain Medicine
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....63e4c8de83ac5c72fd8f01f6e887d5a1
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1097/aap.0b013e318226ba62