Abstrakt: |
Purpose: This study evaluated the effect of neostigmine on heart rate in cardiac transplant patients. Methods: Neostigmine (2.5–50 μg · kg−1) was administered to ASA 1 or 2 patients with normally innervated hearts (controls), and to patients who had undergone recent (<six months before study) or remote (> six months before study) cardiac transplantation. Results: Baseline heart rate was 66 ± 3 beats · min−1in controls (n = 10, mean ± SEM), which was slower than that observed in recently (95 ± 4 beats · min−1, n = 15, P < 0.001) and in remotely (88 ± 3 beats · min−1, n = 16, P < 0.001) transplanted patients. Neostigmine produced a dose-dependent decrease in heart rate in all patients. Controls were the most sensitive to neostigmine, with a 10% decrease in heart rate produced by an estimated dose of 5.0 ± 1.0 μg · kg−1. The recently transplanted group was the least sensitive, with the maximum dose producing only an 8.3 ± 0.9% reduction. The response to neostigmine of the remotely transplanted patients was variable. The estimated dose to produce a 10% decrease in heart rate in this group was 24 ± 6 μg · kg−1which was greater than that for controls (P = 0.008). Administration of atropine (1.2 mg) reversed the neostigmine-induced bradycardia in all three groups. Reversal of the bradycardia consisted of a transient peak increase in heart rate in controls to 145 ± 6% of baseline, a value which was greater than that observed in recent (103 ± 1%, P < 0.001) and in remote (109 ± 3%, P < 0.001) transplants. Conclusions: Neostigmine produces a dose-dependent brady-cardia in heart transplant patients. Some remotely transplanted patients may be particularly sensitive to the bradycardic effects of neostigmine. |