General anesthetics directly inhibit electron mobility: dipole dispersion theory of anesthetic action.

Autor: Hameroff SR, Watt RC, Borel JD, Carlson G
Jazyk: angličtina
Zdroj: Physiological chemistry and physics [Physiol Chem Phys] 1982; Vol. 14 (3), pp. 183-7.
Abstrakt: A model system of gaseous electron mobility, excitation, and plasma activity was used to study direct effects of six gases, including four general anesthetics, in oxygen. Helium increased, and nitrogen had minimal effects on gaseous excitation. Nitrous oxide, as well as the potent anesthetics halothane, enflurane, and isoflurane, inhibited gaseous excitation, nitrous oxide having the weakest anesthetic effect. The data are compatible with the view that anesthetic inhibition is mediated by Van der Waals dipole dispersion interactions among anesthetic molecules (e.g., halogenated hydrocarbons) and electrons accelerated by the applied field. Dipole dispersion interactions may also mediate anesthetic effects on synaptic protein conformational control.
Databáze: MEDLINE