Abstract

Double-burst stimulation (DBS), a new technique to evaluate neuromuscular function, consists of two 50-Hz trains of 60-ms duration and 750 ms apart. DBS was compared with train-of-four (TOF) stimulation in 21 children aged 3-10 yr, during halothane anesthesia. On one arm the ulnar nerve was stimulated supramaximally with TOF stimulation every 12 s and the force of the evoked contraction of the adductor pollicis measured with an FTO3 force transducer and recorded on paper. Atracurium (0.4-0.5 mg.kg-1) was administered. During recovery from neuromuscular blockade, TOF stimulation was interrupted periodically and DBS substituted. The same stimulation patterns were applied to the ulnar nerve of the other arm simultaneously, and the clinical anesthesiologist was asked to estimate the degree of fade with both. There was good correlation between the measured TOF ratio (ratio of fourth to first response) and DBS ratio (ratio of second to first response). The TOF and DBS ratios above which fade could no longer be appreciated manually were (mean +/- SEM) 0.44 +/- 0.03 and 0.67 +/- 0.04 (P = 0.0002). Corresponding ranges were 0.3-0.8 for TOF and 0.4-0.9 for DBS, but DBS fade was always apparent if TOF fade could be detected. Therefore, in children, DBS is more sensitive than is TOF stimulation for the clinical assessment of recovery from neuromuscular blockade.

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