Abstract

The pharmacokinetics of propofol administered as long term infusions were determined in 12 intensive care unit patients (two female; mean age 58 yr, mean weight 66.9 kg) requiring sedation during mechanical ventilation. Patients were recruited after having been administered propofol for 24 h. Blood samples for analysis of propofol were taken during the infusion (mean duration 85.6 h; mean rate 2.58 mg kg-1 h-1) and for up to about 42 h after its termination. The median propofol total body clearance, derived from the apparent steady state propofol blood concentrations during infusion, was 2.11 litre min-1. One patient died during the infusion, from multi-organ failure secondary to a pre-existing septicaemia, and in one other patient no sampling was possible during the first 30 min after infusion; full elimination data were obtained for 10 patients. After termination of the infusion, propofol blood concentrations declined rapidly, with an overall mean decrease of 50% over the first 10 min; thereafter the decline was more gradual. The elimination profile was triphasic in seven patients and biphasic in three patients. Mean half-lives for the three phases were 1.81 (n = 10) min, 70.9 (n = 7) min and 1411 (n = 11) min. There was no apparent trend in the terminal phase half-life with the duration of sampling after infusion.

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