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Nitrous oxide minimal alveolar concentration

Nitrous oxide is the only inhalation anesthetic that is a gas. It is chemically inert. Nitrous oxide has little effect on overall cardiovascular function. Disadvantages are that it has no muscle relaxing effect and that it cannot be used on its own because of high Minimal Alveolar Concentration values needed for adequate anesthesia. During recovery there is a risk for hypoxia and anesthesia should be slowly tapered off to prevent this event. [Pg.363]

Anesthetic potency can be expressed in terms of the minimal alveolar concentration (MAC) at which 50% of patients remain immobile following a defined painful stimulus (skin incision). Whereas the poorly lipophilic nitrous oxide must be inhaled in high concentrations, much smaller concentrations are required in the case of the more lipophilic halothane. [Pg.216]

Current anesthesia protocols usually include several agents in combinations that vary according to the depth of anesthesia required for specific procedures. Inhalational anesthetics, which include nitrous oxide and six halogenated hydrocarbons, have varying potency in proportion to their lipid solubilities. MAC value, a measure of anesthetic potency, is defined as the minimal alveolar anesthetic concentration (% of inspired air) at which 50% of patients do not respond to a surgical stimulus. MAC values are additive, lower in elderly patients, and lower in the presence of opioid analgesics and sedative hypnotics. [Pg.150]


See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.111 , Pg.111 ]




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Minimal alveolar concentration

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