Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0016382 (flushing)
6,387 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Mivacurium is a short-acting nondepolarising muscle relaxant of the benzylisoquinoline type undergoing rapid breakdown by plasma cholinesterase. With 2.5 fold ED95, tracheal intubation can be accomplished within 2-3 min following injection. The ensuing DUR 25% (i.e. time from injection to 25% recovery of control twitch tension) is three times as long as with succinylcholine and about half as long as with equipotent doses of atracurium and vecuronium. The principal side effects of mivacurium are facial flushing and a transient fall in blood pressure due to a moderate histamine release following doses of 3-4 times the ED95. In patients with end stage liver or renal disease as well as in patients with atypical plasma cholinesterase the duration of action of mivacurium is prolonged. Rocuronium is a steroidal non-depolarising neuromuscular blocking agent chemically related to vecuronium. Compared with the latter, rocuronium is less potent, has a shorter onset of action, and no cumulative effects. Adequate intubating conditions are achieved within 60 to 90 s after i.v. injection of twice the ED95. Its elimination from the blood occurs primarily via liver uptake, while renal elimination is about 10 to 30%. Slight vagolytic effects are reported following injection of 0.6 mg/kg rocuronium, while histamine release is unlikely to occur. Atracurium is a mixture of ten stereoisomers. One of them, cis-atracurium, is five times as potent as the chiral mixture while having a similar pharmacodynamic and kinetic profile. It does not cause significant histamine release or clinically relevant cardiovascular effects at doses up to 8 times the ED95. Laudanosine release seems to be less with cis-atracurium than with atracurium.
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PMID:[New muscle relaxants]. 886 25

Mivacurium is a short-acting, nondepolarising muscle relaxant of the benzylisoquinoline type that undergoes rapid breakdown by plasma cholinesterase. After 2.5 times the ED95 (0.2 mg/kg), tracheal intubation can be accomplished within 2-3 min following injection. The ensuing DUR 25% (i.e., time from injection to 25% recovery of control twitch tension) is three times as long as with succinylcholine. The principal side effects of mivacurium are facial flushing and a transient fall in blood pressure due to moderate histamine release following doses 3-4 times the ED95. In patients with end-stage liver or renal disease as well as those with atypical plasma cholinesterase, the duration of action of mivacurium is prolonged.
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PMID:[The clinical pharmacology of mivacurium]. 924 7

The benzylisochinoline muscle relaxants have a highly selective affinity to the motor endplate which is associated with an absence of autonomic side effects such as ganglionic and vagus block. The requirement of only low clinical doses also reduces histamine liberation. Muscle relaxants with high neuromuscular blocking potency have a slow onset. Both atracurium and cisatracurium undergo Hofmann-Elimination in the plasma whereas mivacurium is hydrolyzed by pseudocholinesterase. The difference in kinetics between these pathways render atracurium and cisatracurium muscle relaxants of intermediate duration of action while mivacurium is short acting. Cisatracurium, one of the ten stereoisomeres of atracurium, is 3 to 4 times as potent as atracurium, does not release histamine, has no cardiovascular side effects and, due to the small clinical doses resulting from its high neuromuscular blocking potency, produces only negligible quantities of laudanosine. Its ED95 is 0.05 mg/kg. Good intubation conditions can be expected within 1.5 to 2 min following 3- to 4-times the ED95. Thereafter is takes about 65 min for T1 to recover to 25% of control. Maintenance doses of 0.02 to 0.04 mg/kg have a duration of action of 15 to 20 min. An infusion of cisatracurium of 1.0 to 2.0 mcg/kg/min, is adequate to maintain a 90 to 95% neuromuscular block. The time of recovery is largely independent on the total dose of cisatracurium administered by either repeated injection or infusion. Mivacurium is a racemate of 3 stereoisomeres of which the trans-trans- and the cis-trans-compound account for 95% of the neuromuscular blocking effect. In adults the ED95 is 0.08 mg/kg. The ensuing recovery of T1 to 25% of control is about 15 min. Rapid injection of 3xED95 may transiently lower the arterial blood pressure and may produce skin flushing in an incidence of 30 to 40%. Larger doses should be injected slowly with 30 to 60 s. The onset of mivacurium neuromuscular block following 3xED95 is relatively slow (2 min). Maintenance doses of 0.05 to 0.1 mg/kg have a duration of action of 5 to 10 min. A 95% neuromuscular block may be maintained by an infusion of 3 to 12 micrograms/kg/min. The time of recovery does not depend on the total cumulative dose given by either repeated injection or by infusion. The duration of mivacurium neuromuscular block may be drastically prolonged in the presence of low or atypical plasmacholinesterase. Both neostigmine and edrophonium are suitable reversal agents. None of the presently available benzylisochinoline muscle relaxants has the potential to completely replace succinylcholine.
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PMID:[The clinical pharmacology of new benzylisoquinoline-diester compounds, with special consideration of cisatracurium and mivacurium]. 942 66

BACKGROUND: Infants usually respond differently to a neuromuscular relaxant compared to children or adults. Isoflurane is commonly used as an anesthetic gas in infants. In an RCT design, we investigated whether a dose of mivacurium 250 &mgr;g/kg results in faster onset of action than 200 &mgr;g/kg in infants under isoflurane anesthesia. Spontaneous recovery times and cardiovascular response were also evaluated. METHODS: Twenty-four low surgical risk children, aged 6-24 months, undergoing an elective surgery and requiring tracheal intubation were selected. After anesthetic induction, patients randomly received an iv bolus dose of mivacurium 200 or 250 &mgr;g/kg. After maximal relaxation, the patient was intubated. Isoflurane was administered to maintain anesthetic level during the surgical procedure. Neuromuscular function was monitored by accelerometry (TOF-Guard) at the adductor pollicies. The first twitch (T) of the TOF and the T4/T1 were measured. The time-course of heart rate and systolic and diastolic blood pressure were analysed by transforming them into their respective areas under the curve. RESULTS: Mivacurium 250 &mgr;g/kg produced a maximal T block faster than 200 &mgr;g/kg, i.e. 2.4 +/- 1.1 vs. 3.5 +/- 1.4 min (p < 0.05). Spontaneous recovery times were similar in both groups. Heart rate was similar between doses while systolic and diastolic blood pressures were lower with the higher dose (p < 0.05). Flushing was observed in two cases, one in each group. CONCLUSIONS: The maximal effect of mivacurium 250 &mgr;g/kg, in infants under isoflurane anesthesia, was present one minute faster than 200 &mgr;g/kg. However, it produced a significant cardiovascular response.
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PMID:Effect of mivacurium 200 and 250 &mgr;g/kg in infants during isoflurane anesthesia: a randomized controlled trial [ISRCTN07742712]. 1172 96