Blood bupivacaine concentrations after pecto-serratus and serratus anterior plane injections of plain and liposomal bupivacaine in robotically-assisted mitral valve surgery: Sub-study of a randomized trial

To investigate the timing of peak blood concentrations and potential toxicity when using a combination of plain and liposomal bupivacaine for thoracic fascial plane blocks. Pharmacokinetic analysis. Operating room. Eighteen adult patients undergoing robotically-assisted mitral valve surgery. Ultraso...

Ausführliche Beschreibung

Gespeichert in:
Bibliographische Detailangaben
Veröffentlicht in:Journal of clinical anesthesia 2024-08, Vol.95, p.111470, Article 111470
Hauptverfasser: Alfirevic, Andrej, Almonacid-Cardenas, Federico, Yalcin, Esra Kutlu, Shah, Karan, Kelava, Marta, Sessler, Daniel I., Turan, Alparslan
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
Schlagworte:
Online-Zugang:Volltext
Tags: Tag hinzufügen
Keine Tags, Fügen Sie den ersten Tag hinzu!
Beschreibung
Zusammenfassung:To investigate the timing of peak blood concentrations and potential toxicity when using a combination of plain and liposomal bupivacaine for thoracic fascial plane blocks. Pharmacokinetic analysis. Operating room. Eighteen adult patients undergoing robotically-assisted mitral valve surgery. Ultrasound-guided pecto-serratus and serratus anterior plane blocks using a mixture of 0.5% bupivacaine HCl up to 2.5 mg/kg and liposomal bupivacaine up to 266 mg. Arterial plasma bupivacaine concentration. Samples from 13 participants were analyzed. There was substantial inter-patient variability in plasma concentrations. A geometric mean maximum bupivacaine concentration was 1492 ng/ml (range 660 to 4650 ng/ml) at median time of 30 min after injection. In 4/13 (31%) patients, plasma bupivacaine concentrations exceeded our predefined 2000 ng/ml toxic threshold. A second much smaller peak was observed about 32 h after the injection. No obvious signs of local anesthetic toxicity were observed. Combined injection of plain and liposomal bupivacaine for pecto-serratus/serratus anterior plane blocks produced a biphasic pattern, with the highest arterial plasma concentrations observed within 30 min. Maximum concentrations exceeded the potential toxic threshold in nearly a third of patients, but without clinical evidence of toxicity. Clinicians should not assume that routine combinations of plain and liposomal bupivacaine for thoracic fascial plane blocks are inherently safe. [Display omitted] •A combination of plain and liposomal bupivacaine is used for fascial plane blocks•Local anesthetic mixture produces a biphasic concentration pattern•Peak arterial plasma concentration is reached in 30 min•Toxic concentration is surpassed in a third of patients•No clinically obvious consequences were observed
ISSN:0952-8180
1873-4529
1873-4529
DOI:10.1016/j.jclinane.2024.111470