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Modern Anesthetics

Title
Modern Anesthetics [electronic resource] / edited by Jürgen Schüttler, Helmut Schwilden.
ISBN
9783540748069
Publication
Berlin, Heidelberg : Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 2008.
Physical Description
1 online resource (XVI, 498 p.) 112 illus., 5 illus. in color.
Local Notes
Access is available to the Yale community.
Access and use
Access restricted by licensing agreement.
Summary
Some important constraints of anesthesia must be taken into consideration when the pharmacological properties of modern anesthetics are discussed. The most imp- tant of these could be that the target effect be achieved preferably within seconds, at most within a few minutes. Similarly, offset of drug action should be achieved within minutes rather hours. The target effects, such as unconsciousness, are pot- tially life-threatening, as are the side effects of modern anesthetics, such as respi- tory and cardiovascular depression. Finally, the patient’s purposeful responses are not available to guide drug dosage, because, either the patient is unconscious, or more problematically, the patient is aware but unable to communicate pain because of neuromuscular blockade. These constraints were already recognised 35 years ago, when in 1972 Volume XXX entitled “Modern Inhalation Anesthetics” appeared in this Handbook Series. The present volume is meant as a follow up and extension of that volume. At the beginning of the 1970’s anesthesia was commonly delivered by inhalation, with only very few exceptions. The clinical understanding of that time considered anesthesia as a unique state achieved by any of the inhalation anesthetics, in- pendent of their specific molecular structure. “The very mechanism of anesthetic action at the biophase” was discussed within the theoretical framework of the “u- tary theory of narcosis”.
Variant and related titles
With contributions by numerous experts
Springer ENIN.
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Format
Books / Online
Language
English
Added to Catalog
September 14, 2018
Series
Handbook of experimental pharmacology ; 182.
Handbook of Experimental Pharmacology, 182
Contents
Molecular Mechanisms of Anesthetic Action
The Site of Anesthetic Action
Inhibitory Ligand-Gated Ion Channels as Substrates for General Anesthetic Actions
Actions of Anesthetics on Excitatory Transmitter-Gated Channels
Voltage-Gated Ion Channels
G-Protein-Coupled Receptors
Modern Inhalation Anesthetics
Inhalation Anaesthesia: From Diethyl Ether to Xenon
General Anesthetics and Long-Term Neurotoxicity
Special Aspects of Pharmacokinetics of Inhalation Anesthesia
Inhalational Anaesthetics and Cardioprotection
Non-Immobilizing Inhalational Anesthetic-Like Compounds
Modern Intravenous Anesthetics
Propofol
Pharmacokinetics and Pharmacodynamics of GPI 15715 or Fospropofol (Aquavan Injection) — A Water-Soluble Propofol Prodrug
Etomidate and Other Non-Barbiturates
Remifentanil and Other Opioids
Ketamine
Midazolam and Other Benzodiazepines
Pharmacokinetics-Pharmacodynamics Based Administration of Anesthetics
The Effect of Altered Physiological States on Intravenous Anesthetics
Anesthetics Drug Pharmacodynamics
Defining Depth of Anesthesia
Target Controlled Anaesthetic Drug Dosing
Advanced Technologies and Devices for Inhalational Anesthetic Drug Dosing
Hypnotic and Opioid Anesthetic Drug Interactions on the CNS, Focus on Response Surface Modeling.
Also listed under
Schüttler, Jürgen.
Schwilden, Helmut.
SpringerLink (Online service)
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