Seminars in Cardiothoracic and Vascular Anesthesia

 

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Seminars in Cardiothoracic and Vascular Anesthesia, Vol. 7, No. 3, 311-331 (2003)
DOI: 10.1177/108925320300700307

Effects of General Anesthetics on Regulation of the Peripheral Vasculature

Thomas A. Stekiel, MD

Department of Anesthesiology, The Medical College of Wisconsin; The Zablocki Veterans Affairs Medical Center, Milwaukee, Wisconsin

Zeljko J. Bosnjak, PhD

Departments of Anesthesiology and Physiology, The Medical College of Wisconsin

William J. Stekiel, PhD

Department of Anesthesiology, The Medical College of Wisconsin

The heart is a passively filling pump in a circulatory system that is connected in series with distensible blood vessels. Therefore, systemic blood pressure and tissue perfusion depend upon adequate peripheral vascular tone as well as myocardial function. Likewise, pharmacologic agents that alter circulatory stability can affect one or both of these components. The generalized depressor effects of general anesthetics have been well known clinically for over 50 years. Moreover, there are many similarities in basic cellular regulatory mechanisms among the different tissue types, and general anesthetics are well known to distribute freely among the perfusion-rich tissues (eg, central nervous system, cardiovascular system, and renal system). Therefore, it is likely that the hemodynamic depression resulting from the systemic administration of anesthetics results from actions on regulatory mechanisms of the peripheral vasculature as well as on the heart. The peripheral vasculature is regulated by extrinsic neural, endothelial, and humoral mechanisms, which interact with each other as well as with intrinsic membrane and intracellular systems within the vascular smooth muscle cell. Different general anesthetics have been found to act on specific mechanisms at each of these levels. However, the large number and complexity of these known mechanisms, as well as the many anesthetic agents, has made it extremely difficult to determine which are significant in terms of the meaningful mechanisms that are responsible for anesthetic action, major side effects, or both. Current knowledge about the effects of general anesthetics on both the extrinsic intrinsic regulatory mechanisms of peripheral vascular control is reviewed.


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