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A meta-analysis reported that the incidence of residual neuromuscular paralysis was 41% in patients receiving intermediate neuromuscular blocking agents during anaesthesia. [1] It is possible that > 100,000 patients annually in the USA alone, are at risk of adverse events associated with undetected residual neuromuscular blockade. [5]
A depolarizing neuromuscular blocking agent is a form of neuromuscular blocker that depolarizes the motor end plate. [15] An example is succinylcholine . Depolarizing blocking agents work by depolarizing the plasma membrane of the muscle fiber, similar to acetylcholine .
The British Journal of Anaesthesia published an article in 2015 in which the incidence of residual neuromuscular blockade could be reduced to zero if sugammadex is used as the reversal agent and the correct dosage is selected with the use of neuromuscular monitoring. [17]
Neuromuscular monitoring is recommended when neuromuscular-blocking drugs have been part of the general anesthesia and the doctor wishes to avoid postoperative residual curarization (PORC) in the patient, that is, the residual paralysis of muscles stemming from these drugs. [citation needed]
Depolarizing neuromuscular blockers: Depolarizing agents act as agonists for acetylcholine receptors. Succinylcholine is currently the only depolarizing neuromuscular blocking drug that has been placed in ongoing clinical use. Its pharmacological structure resembles two acetylcholine molecules combined through acetate methyl groups. [11]
Vecuronium is in the aminosteroid neuromuscular-blocker family of medications and is of the non-depolarizing type. [2] It works by competitively blocking the action of acetylcholine on skeletal muscles. [2] The effects may be reversed with sugammadex or a combination of neostigmine and glycopyrrolate. To minimize residual blockade, reversal ...
General anaesthesia (UK) or general anesthesia (US) is medically induced loss of consciousness that renders a patient unarousable even by painful stimuli. [5] It is achieved through medications, which can be injected or inhaled, often with an analgesic and neuromuscular blocking agent.
At that time, intravenous anesthetic agents were not yet in common use, and neuromuscular-blocking drugs were not used at all during general anesthesia. The introduction of neuromuscular blocking agents (such as succinylcholine and tubocurarine ) changed the concept of general anesthesia as it could produce temporary paralysis (a desired ...