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Resistance to decamethonium neuromuscular block after prior administration of vecuronium
Authors:NT Campkin  JR Hood  SA Feldman
Affiliation:Magill Department of Anaesthetics, Westminster Hospital, London, United Kingdom.
Abstract:Prior administration of nondepolarizing neuromuscular blocking drugs reduces the potency of subsequently administered succinylcholine. To assess whether this interaction is also observed with the depolarizing drug, decamethonium, the potency of decamethonium alone and decamethonium after vecuronium (10 micrograms/kg) were assessed using a cumulative dose-response technique in two groups of six healthy patients each. Patients were premedicated with meperidine and promethazine and anesthetized with thiopental, isoflurane, and nitrous oxide in oxygen. Twitch tension was monitored using adductor pollicis mechanomyography in response to ulnar nerve stimulation at 0.1 Hz. The mean (SEM) dose of decamethonium producing 80% twitch tension depression (ED80) when administered alone was 37 (4.0) micrograms/kg. After recovery of twitch tension (but persistence of train-of-four fade) from vecuronium, the mean (SEM) ED80 for decamethonium was increased to 89 (4.4) micrograms/kg (P < 0.01). The shift to the right of the dose-response curve for decamethonium was nonparallel. Antagonism is observed when decamethonium is administered after a small dose of vercuronium; this interaction, which is also seen with succinylcholine, is likely to be a feature of depolarizing block. Nonparallel shift of the dose-response curve to decamethonium indicates that this is not likely to be a simple agonist-antagonist effect at a single site.
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