Information ⬇
- Volatile anesthetics (not nitrous oxide) directly relax skeletal muscle (most prominent >1 MAC) and potentiate the action of neuromuscular blocking drugs. (The infusion rate of rocuronium required to maintain neuromuscular blockade is 30%40% less with isoflurane, desflurane, and sevoflurane than with propofol.)
- Although the mechanism of this potentiation is not entirely clear, it appears to be largely caused by a postsynaptic effect at the nicotinic acetylcholine receptors located at the neuromuscular junction. (Volatile anesthetics act synergistically with neuromuscular blocking drugs to enhance their action.)
- All volatile anesthetics serve as triggers for malignant hyperthermia (halothane greatest and desflurane less), but nitrous oxide is only a weak trigger.
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