Korean J Anesthesiol Search

CLOSE


Korean Journal of Anesthesiology 2009;56(4):363-370.
DOI: https://doi.org/10.4097/kjae.2009.56.4.363   
Change in characteristics of human vagal sigmoidal baroreflex curve during conscious state and general anesthesia.
Su Jin Kang, Gyu Sam Hwang
Department of Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine, Asan Medical Center, University of Ulsan College of Medicine, Seoul, Korea. kshwang@amc.seoul.kr
Abstract
BACKGROUND
Volatile anesthetics have been shown to decrease baroreflex. In humans, cardiovagal baroreflex curve is best described to be sigmoidal and analysis of sigmoid model can provide more information, such as threshold (THR), saturation (SAT), maximal gain (Gmax), operating range (OR, difference between THR and SAT), operational point (OP, relative position of resting set point within the OR) in addition to the linear gain. We compared the changes in the sigmoid model of the systolic blood pressure (SBP)-RR interval relation between awake state and general anesthesia. METHODS: Sigmoid curve was obtained using the 'modified Oxford technique' (bolus sodium nitroprusside followed by bolus phenylephrine) to perturb SBP in awake group and 2 vol% sevoflurane anesthesia group. Radial arterial beat-by-beat SBP and raw RR interval data points were plotted and then binned in 2 mmHg SBP increments. Curve fittings were performed using symmetric four-parameter sigmoid model and asymmetric five-parameter sigmoid model. Gmax was calculated from the first derivative of the logistic function. RESULTS: Compared with awake control, general anesthesia caused decreases of linear gain, Gmax and OR. RR interval THR and SBP THR were unaffected, whereas SBP SAT increased and RR interval SAT decreased, resulting from reduced linear gain and curvature parameter. Resting set point fell and OP shifted significantly to THR region.
CONCLUSIONS
Sigmoidal baroreflex curve revealed diminished gains, OR and OP during general anesthesia. Moreover, our results demonstrate that the analysis of sigmoid baroreflex arc across the entire baroreflex range provide more unique information beyond that of linear gain.
Key Words: Anesthesia; Autonomic; Baroreflex; Modified Oxford method; Sigmoidal


ABOUT
ARTICLE CATEGORY

Browse all articles >

BROWSE ARTICLES
AUTHOR INFORMATION
Editorial Office
101-3503, Lotte Castle President, 109 Mapo-daero, Mapo-gu, Seoul 04146, Korea
Tel: +82-2-792-5128    Fax: +82-2-792-4089    E-mail: journal@anesthesia.or.kr                

Copyright © 2024 by Korean Society of Anesthesiologists.

Developed in M2PI

Close layer
prev next