Bidirectional modulation of isoflurane potency by intrathecal tetrodotoxin and veratridine in rats

Authors

Y Zhang, M Guzinski, EI Eger II, MJ Laster, M Sharma, RA Harris, HC Hemmings Jr

Background and purpose:  Results from several studies point to voltage‐gated Na+ channels as potential mediators of the immobility produced by inhaled anaesthetics. We hypothesized that the intrathecal administration of tetrodotoxin, a drug that blocks Na+ channels, should enhance anaesthetic potency, and that concurrent administration of veratridine, a drug that augments Na+ channel opening, should reverse the increase in potency.

Experimental approach:  We measured the change in isoflurane potency for reducing movement in response to a painful stimulus as defined by MAC (minimum alveolar concentration of anaesthetic required to abolish movement in 50% of subjects) caused by intrathecal infusion of various concentrations of tetrodotoxin into the lumbothoracic subarachnoid space of rats, and the change in MAC caused by the administration of a fixed dose of tetrodotoxin plus various doses of intrathecal veratridine.

Key results:  Intrathecal infusion of tetrodotoxin (0.078–0.63 µM) produced a reversible dose‐related decrease in MAC, of more than 50% at the highest concentration. Intrathecal co‐administration of veratridine (1.6–6.4 µM) reversed this decrease in a dose‐related manner, with nearly complete reversal at the highest veratridine dose tested.

Conclusions and implications:  Intrathecal administration of tetrodotoxin increases isoflurane potency (decreases isoflurane MAC), and intrathecal administration of veratridine counteracts this effect in vivo. These findings are consistent with a role for voltage‐gated Na+ channel blockade in the immobility produced by inhaled anaesthetics.

Digital Object Identifier (DOI)

10.1111/j.1476-5381.2009.00583.x About DOI

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