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Barry 2013
Basics exam 4 locals
33
Other
Graduate
02/24/2011

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Term
Is the interior of a cell (when polarized) neutral, positively charged, or negatively charged? Why?
Definition
Slightly negative because the Na/K ATPase system exchanges 3 Na+ out of cell for every 2 K+ into cell.
Term
What is action potential?
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.
Term
How is an action potential generated?
Definition
If depolarization exceeds a threshold level (abvoe -55 mV), voltage gated sodium channels are activated and large amounts of sodium enter the cell
Term
Why does the membrane potential increase to 35 mV?
Definition
The large influx of sodium cations
Term
What happens as action potential reaches its peak?
Definition
Sodium channels close and potassium channels open--> potassium exits cell (cell is repolarizing)
Term
How to local anesthetics work?
Definition
Bind directly to voltage-gated sodium channels and block the entrance of sodium into cell.
Term
Does the blocking of voltage gated sodium channels alter resting membrane potential?
Definition
NO
Term
What is sensitivity to local anesthetic blockade determined by?
Definition
Axonal diameter
degree of myelination
conduction velocity
relative location in nerve bundle
Term
What is the structure of local anesthetics?
Definition
benzene ring (lipophilic) + teriary amine (hydrophilic) separated by:

ester = ester LA's OR...
amide= amide LA's
Term
Are LA's acids or bases?
Definition
Weak bases
Term
How are Local anesthetics metabolized?
Definition
Esters: pseudocholinesterase

Amides: Liver
Term
What happens if you give an ester in the subarachnoid space?
Definition
It will last longer because there are no esterases in the CSF.
Term
Who would you want to be careful giving an amide LA to?
Definition
Anyone with hepatic dysfunction (cirrhosis) or decreased blood flow to liver (CHF, Vasopressors)
Term
What can prilocaine cause?
Definition
methemoglobinemia d/t metabolite--> O-toluidine
Term
What is pharmacological treatment for methemoglobinemia?
Definition
methylene blue 1-2 mg/kg IV over 5 mins.
Converts Fe3+ to Fe2+
Term
What can prilocaine cause?
Definition
methemoglobinemia d/t metabolite--> O-toluidine
Term
What is pharmacological treatment for methemoglobinemia?
Definition
methylene blue 1-2 mg/kg IV over 5 mins.
Converts Fe3+ to Fe2+
Term
Who would you want to be careful giving an amide LA to?
Definition
Anyone with hepatic dysfunction (cirrhosis) or decreased blood flow to liver (CHF, Vasopressors)
Term
How does lipid solubility relate to potency and duration of action.
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
Term
How does protein binding relate to duration of action?
Definition
local anesthetics bind to alpha-1 acid glycoprotein (and albumin to a lesser extent) which prolongs their elimination
Term
What is pKa?
Definition
It is the pH at which the non-ionized and ionized form of drug is in equilibrium
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?
Definition
A) Lipid
B) Water
C) Non-ionized
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?
Definition
FALSE. The non-ionized form has a quicker onset due to its lipid solubility and ability to penetrate cell wall
Term
What happens if you inject a local anesthetic in an environment that is more basic then the pKa of that drug?
Definition
You will have more non-ionized portion of the drug and it will have a fast onset
Term
What is the most cardiotoxic local anesthetic?
Definition
bupivicaine- blocks cardiac Na+ channels and dissociates very slowly
Term
When should you NEVER combine local anesthetic with epinephrine?
Definition
If doing a peripheral nerve block on a penis or on digits (fingers, toes)
Term
Name the structures you will penetrate when doing an epidural from posterior to anterior
Definition
1. Skin
2. Sub Q tissue
3. supraspinous ligament
4. intraspinous ligament
5. ligamentum flavun (crunch)
6. epidural space
Term
A) If doing a spinal, what structures exist anterior to the epidural space?

B) Where is CSF?
Definition
A) spinal meninges- dura mater, arachnoid mater, pia mater

B) Between arachnoid and pia mater
Term
When doing an epidural, once you have threaded the catheter what MUST you do?
why?
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)
Term
How many vertebrae are there?
Definition
33 total- 7 cervical, 12 thoracic, 5 lumbar, 5 sacral, and 4 coccygeal
Term
You have 7 cervical vertebrae but how many cervical nerve roots are there?
Definition
8
Term
What are the CV effects of epidural/spinal anesthesia?
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
Term
What is the order of blockade with Local anesthetics?
Definition
sympathetic, temperature, pain, touch, pressure, motor, vibration, proprioception
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