Term
Is the interior of a cell (when polarized) neutral, positively charged, or negatively charged? Why? |
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Definition
Slightly negative because the Na/K ATPase system exchanges 3 Na+ out of cell for every 2 K+ into cell. |
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Term
What is action potential? |
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Definition
A large change in membrane potential from a resting value of about -70 mV to peak of about +35 mV and back to -70 mV again. |
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Term
How is an action potential generated? |
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Definition
If depolarization exceeds a threshold level (abvoe -55 mV), voltage gated sodium channels are activated and large amounts of sodium enter the cell |
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Term
Why does the membrane potential increase to 35 mV? |
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Definition
The large influx of sodium cations |
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Term
What happens as action potential reaches its peak? |
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Definition
Sodium channels close and potassium channels open--> potassium exits cell (cell is repolarizing) |
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Term
How to local anesthetics work? |
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Definition
Bind directly to voltage-gated sodium channels and block the entrance of sodium into cell. |
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Term
Does the blocking of voltage gated sodium channels alter resting membrane potential? |
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Definition
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Term
What is sensitivity to local anesthetic blockade determined by? |
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Definition
Axonal diameter degree of myelination conduction velocity relative location in nerve bundle |
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Term
What is the structure of local anesthetics? |
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Definition
benzene ring (lipophilic) + teriary amine (hydrophilic) separated by:
ester = ester LA's OR... amide= amide LA's |
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Term
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Definition
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Term
How are Local anesthetics metabolized? |
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Definition
Esters: pseudocholinesterase
Amides: Liver |
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Term
What happens if you give an ester in the subarachnoid space? |
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Definition
It will last longer because there are no esterases in the CSF. |
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Term
Who would you want to be careful giving an amide LA to? |
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Definition
Anyone with hepatic dysfunction (cirrhosis) or decreased blood flow to liver (CHF, Vasopressors) |
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Term
What can prilocaine cause? |
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Definition
methemoglobinemia d/t metabolite--> O-toluidine |
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Term
What is pharmacological treatment for methemoglobinemia? |
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Definition
methylene blue 1-2 mg/kg IV over 5 mins. Converts Fe3+ to Fe2+ |
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Term
What can prilocaine cause? |
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Definition
methemoglobinemia d/t metabolite--> O-toluidine |
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Term
What is pharmacological treatment for methemoglobinemia? |
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Definition
methylene blue 1-2 mg/kg IV over 5 mins. Converts Fe3+ to Fe2+ |
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Term
Who would you want to be careful giving an amide LA to? |
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Definition
Anyone with hepatic dysfunction (cirrhosis) or decreased blood flow to liver (CHF, Vasopressors) |
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Term
How does lipid solubility relate to potency and duration of action. |
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Definition
It is directly proportional to potency. The more lipophilic the more readily it will cross nerve membrane--> less molecules required for blockade= enhanced potency. Lipid solubility is also directly proportional to duration of action. The more lipid soluble, the less likely the LA is going to be cleared by blood flow |
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Term
How does protein binding relate to duration of action? |
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Definition
local anesthetics bind to alpha-1 acid glycoprotein (and albumin to a lesser extent) which prolongs their elimination |
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Term
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Definition
It is the pH at which the non-ionized and ionized form of drug is in equilibrium |
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Term
A) is the non-ionized form lipid or water soluble? B) what about the ionized form? C) Do we want more non-ionized or more ionized? |
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Definition
A) Lipid B) Water C) Non-ionized |
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Term
True or False. A local anesthetic with a high amount of ionized drug will have a quicker onset than one with a high amount of non-ionized drug? |
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Definition
FALSE. The non-ionized form has a quicker onset due to its lipid solubility and ability to penetrate cell wall |
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Term
What happens if you inject a local anesthetic in an environment that is more basic then the pKa of that drug? |
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Definition
You will have more non-ionized portion of the drug and it will have a fast onset |
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Term
What is the most cardiotoxic local anesthetic? |
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Definition
bupivicaine- blocks cardiac Na+ channels and dissociates very slowly |
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Term
When should you NEVER combine local anesthetic with epinephrine? |
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Definition
If doing a peripheral nerve block on a penis or on digits (fingers, toes) |
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Term
Name the structures you will penetrate when doing an epidural from posterior to anterior |
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Definition
1. Skin 2. Sub Q tissue 3. supraspinous ligament 4. intraspinous ligament 5. ligamentum flavun (crunch) 6. epidural space |
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Term
A) If doing a spinal, what structures exist anterior to the epidural space?
B) Where is CSF? |
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Definition
A) spinal meninges- dura mater, arachnoid mater, pia mater
B) Between arachnoid and pia mater |
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Term
When doing an epidural, once you have threaded the catheter what MUST you do? why? |
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Definition
TEST DOSE- 3 mL of 1.5% lidocaine (45mg) with 1:200,000 epinephrine (15 mcg) to make sure you are not in a blood vessel (if you are you will see increase in HR and BP by ~20-30%) and to make sure you are not in the subarachnoid space (if you are the pt will exhibit signs of spinal-- numb from belly button down FAST, but not enough to elicit "high" spinal) |
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Term
How many vertebrae are there? |
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Definition
33 total- 7 cervical, 12 thoracic, 5 lumbar, 5 sacral, and 4 coccygeal |
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Term
You have 7 cervical vertebrae but how many cervical nerve roots are there? |
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Definition
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Term
What are the CV effects of epidural/spinal anesthesia? |
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Definition
Decreased heart rate if block up to level T1-T4 (cardioaccelerator fibers) Vasodilation (dec. CO d/t VENOUS dilation and dec. preload)
Should see compensatory tachycardia after BP drops, unless cardioaccelerator fibers blocked |
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Term
What is the order of blockade with Local anesthetics? |
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Definition
sympathetic, temperature, pain, touch, pressure, motor, vibration, proprioception |
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