Title : Physostigmine and Methylphenidate Induce Distinct Arousal States During Isoflurane General Anesthesia in Rats - Kenny_2016_Anesth.Analg_123_1210 |
Author(s) : Kenny JD , Chemali JJ , Cotten JF , Van Dort CJ , Kim SE , Ba D , Taylor NE , Brown EN , Solt K |
Ref : Anesthesia & Analgesia , 123 :1210 , 2016 |
Abstract :
BACKGROUND: Although emergence from general anesthesia is clinically treated as a passive process driven by the pharmacokinetics of drug clearance, agents that hasten recovery from general anesthesia may be useful for treating delayed emergence, emergence delirium, and postoperative cognitive dysfunction. Activation of central monoaminergic neurotransmission with methylphenidate has been shown to induce reanimation (active emergence) from general anesthesia. Cholinergic neurons in the brainstem and basal forebrain are also known to promote arousal. The objective of this study was to test the hypothesis that physostigmine, a centrally acting cholinesterase inhibitor, induces reanimation from isoflurane anesthesia in adult rats. |
PubMedSearch : Kenny_2016_Anesth.Analg_123_1210 |
PubMedID: 26991753 |
Kenny JD, Chemali JJ, Cotten JF, Van Dort CJ, Kim SE, Ba D, Taylor NE, Brown EN, Solt K (2016)
Physostigmine and Methylphenidate Induce Distinct Arousal States During Isoflurane General Anesthesia in Rats
Anesthesia & Analgesia
123 :1210
Kenny JD, Chemali JJ, Cotten JF, Van Dort CJ, Kim SE, Ba D, Taylor NE, Brown EN, Solt K (2016)
Anesthesia & Analgesia
123 :1210