Effect of n-Alkane Kinetics in Rats on Potency Estimations and the Meyer-Overton Hypothesis

Neither lipophilicity nor vapor pressure of larger n-alkanes appear to correlate with their anesthetizing partial pressures in inspired gas. Such results suggest that the Meyer-Overton hypothesis and Fergusonʼs rule may not apply to these compounds. An alternative explanation might be that a large d...

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Veröffentlicht in:Anesthesia and analgesia 1994-12, Vol.79 (6), p.1049-1055
Hauptverfasser: Liu, Jin, Laster, Michael J., Taheri, Shahram, Eger, Edmond I, Chortkoff, Ben, Halsey, Michael J.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Neither lipophilicity nor vapor pressure of larger n-alkanes appear to correlate with their anesthetizing partial pressures in inspired gas. Such results suggest that the Meyer-Overton hypothesis and Fergusonʼs rule may not apply to these compounds. An alternative explanation might be that a large difference in inspired-to-arterial partial pressure exists, i.e., that the inspired partial pressure misrepresents the effective partial pressure. To test this explanation, we investigated the kinetics of five consecutive even-numbered n-alkanes (C2H6 to C10H22) in rats. The ratio of end-tidal-to-inspired (PA/PI), arterial-to-end-tidal (Pa/PA), and arterial-to-inspired (Pa/PI) partial pressures decreased with increasing carbon chain length, consistent with our separate finding that blood solubility increased. Using Pa/PI and the minimum inspired concentration (MIC) obtained previously, we calculated the true effective potency, minimum alveolar anesthetic concentration (MAC); of these n-alkanes as (Pa/PI)(MIC). This markedly improved, but did not perfectly correct, the correlation of MAC with lipid solubility (the Meyer-Overton hypothesis) and vapor pressure (Fergusonʼs rule). A coefficient of variation of 76.7% was found for the product of MAC and the olive oil/gas partition coefficient. More importantly, the correlation of the logarithm of MAC and oil solubility had a slope of −0.724 (i.e., deviated from −1.0), whereas the slope for eight conventional anesthetics was −1.046 (approached −1.0). These data imply that olive oil does not adequately mimic the nature of the anesthetic site of action of n-alkanes. (Anesth Analg 1994;79:1049–55)
ISSN:0003-2999
1526-7598
DOI:10.1213/00000539-199412000-00005