Abstract

Conventional anaesthetic techniques do not allow for the automatic control of end-tidal halothane concentration and, therefore, brain concentration cannot be predicted. In this study, eight dogs were ventilated with halothane in oxygen using a new closed-loop anaesthetic breathing system which provided a constant end-tidal concentration. During the first 60 min the end-tidal concentration was maintained at 0.87 vol% (1 MAC). Then followed 60 min of halothane wash-out and a further 120-min period of halothane at 1.74 vol% (2 MAC). Halothane concentrations were measured in the inspired and expired air, and in the arterial, cerebral venous and mixed venous blood. Haemodynamic and respiratory variables were measured. The system reached 95% of the target end-tidal concentration within 6 min without over-shooting. After 2 h of wash-in, significant gradients still persisted between end-tidal, arterial and cerebral venous blood concentrations. Measured uptake differed from theoretically calculated uptake by 18.3-57.6%, depending on the model used. Measured arterial and cerebral venous concentrations differed from theoretically calculated values by 7% and 17.5%, respectively. It was shown that the required end-tidal concentrations can be obtained rapidly and accurately, and that brain tissue concentrations can be predicted within certain limits.

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