Korean J Anesthesiol.  1998 Jan;34(1):77-85. 10.4097/kjae.1998.34.1.77.

The Effects of Esmolol or Labetalol on Hemodynamic and Catecholamine Level in Endotracheal Intubation

Affiliations
  • 1Department of Anesthesiology, Ajou University School of Medicine, Suwon, Korea.

Abstract

BACKGROUND
Sympathetic blocking agent, esmolol (selective beta 1 blocker) or labetalol ( alpha and beta blocker) would prevent the hypertension and tachycardia from endotracheal intubation. We have carried out the study to see the effects of esmolol or labetalol on the blood pressure, heart rate, rate pressure product and plasma catecolamines during the endotracheal intubation.
METHODS
Thirty-three ASA physical status 1 or 2 adult patients were allocated into three groups; Group I:control (n=10), Group II:esmolol (n=11) and Group III: labetalol (n=12). In Group I, 2 ml of normal saline, in Group II, 1 mg/kg of esmolol, and in Group III, 0.2 mg/kg of labetalol were given 3, 2 and 4 minutes before endotracheal intubation. Blood pressure and heart rate were measured after arrival at the operating room, before endotracheal intubation and after endotracheal intubation at 15, 60, 120, 180 and 300 seconds interval under the inhalation anesthesia (enflurane-N2O-O2). Rate-pressure product was calculated from the heart rate and systolic blood pressure (RPP = heart rate x systolic blood pressure). The plasma cathecolamines, dopamine, norepinephrine and epinephrine, were measured before intubation as a baseline value and 2 minute after intubation.
RESULTS
Systolic blood pressure, rate-pressure product and heart rate were significantly lower in esmolol and labetalol groups than in control group after intubation ( p<0.05). Esmolol reduced the heart rate and the rate-pressure product than labetalol, but statistically there were no significance (P > 0.05). Plasma level of dopamine, norepinephrine and epinephrine showed higher values after intubation in all three groups ( p<0.05). But there were no difference among groups (P>0.05). The side effects of esmolol and labetalol did not appear at all.
CONCLUSION
1 mg/kg of esmolol given 2 min before intubation or 0.2 mg/kg of labetalol given 4 min before intubation reduce increasing of blood pressure and heart rate, caused by adnergic response following endotracheal intubation, significantly. The reason is that esmolol and labetalol do not decrease release of catecholamines but attenuate responses of elevated catecholamines following endotracheal intubation.

Keyword

Intubation, tracheal; Sympathetic nervous system, pharmcology: dopamine; epinephrine; esmolol; norepinephrine; labetalol

MeSH Terms

Adult
Anesthesia, Inhalation
Blood Pressure
Catecholamines
Dopamine
Epinephrine
Heart Rate
Hemodynamics*
Humans
Hypertension
Intubation
Intubation, Intratracheal*
Labetalol*
Norepinephrine
Operating Rooms
Plasma
Tachycardia
Catecholamines
Dopamine
Epinephrine
Labetalol
Norepinephrine
Full Text Links
  • KJAE
Actions
Cited
CITED
export Copy
Close
Share
  • Twitter
  • Facebook
Similar articles
Copyright © 2024 by Korean Association of Medical Journal Editors. All rights reserved.     E-mail: koreamed@kamje.or.kr