Abstract

The haemodynamic effects of enflurane (1.7% and 3.4% expiratory concentrations) were investigated in sheep (n = 6) pretreated with an infusion of metoprolol (0.2 mg X kg-1 X h-1 for 5 days) and in control animals (n = 6). Chloralose was used as basal anaesthetic. A 90 s apnoea period was included in the experiment to evaluate further the possible side-effects of long-term metoprolol treatment in combination with enflurane anaesthesia. MAC 1.0 for enflurane in the sheep was found at 1.45% end-tidal concentration by separate measurements. Before enflurane administration, the only significant differences between the two groups of animals were a lower systemic vascular resistance and a higher stroke volume during metoprolol treatment. Enflurane abolished these discrepancies in a dose-dependent fashion and similar cardiovascular depression was observed in both groups of animals at 3.4% expiratory concentration of enflurane. Metoprolol did not significantly affect the hypertensive response to apnoea during chloralose anaesthesia alone. At enflurane 1.7% expiratory concentration the apnoea response was small and only the metoprolol-treated animals showed a significant increase in left ventricular end-diastolic pressure. We conclude that 5 days of pretreatment with metoprolol in the sheep model does not significantly impair cardiovascular performance during enflurane anaesthesia.

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