Abstract

Bolus intravenous (IV) administration of commonly used IV anesthetic agents such as fentanyl and the fentanyl analogues, alfentanil, remifentanil, and sufentanil, etomidate and propofol, produced anesthesia in rats as measured by the loss of righting (LOR) with calculated ED150 doses of 0.06, 0.09, 0.037, 0.007, 2.51 and 6.12 mg/kg, respectively. Animals trained in an eight arm radial maze (RAM) were assessed for cognitive recovery, as measured by response efficiency (percentage of correct arm entries within 10 min), immediately, 15 min and 30 min following IV administration of the calculated ED150 dose of each of these agents, and the subsequent return of righting (ROR). Animals administered fentanyl or sufentanil were unable to successfully complete the maze throughout the testing periods. Animals receiving remifentanil showed cognitive recovery within the first testing interval (immediately following the return of righting), while animals receiving alfentanil, etomidate or propofol showed recovery at the 15-min testing interval following ROR. In a separate experiment, bolus IV administration of the ED150 dose of these agents was evaluated in an acute rat EEG model. Following ROR, return to baseline EEG levels occurred at 0.30, 2.88, 5.06, 16.25, 31.29 and 43.98 min for remifentanil, propofol, alfentanil, etomidate, fentanyl and sufentanil, respectively. These data show that the return to efficient cognitive functioning corresponds to the return to normal baseline EEG waveforms.

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