Fj. Tendillo et al., CARDIOPULMONARY AND ANALGESIC EFFECTS OF XYLAZINE, DETOMIDINE, MEDETOMIDINE, AND THE ANTAGONIST ATIPAMEZOLE IN ISOFLURANE-ANESTHETIZED SWINE, Laboratory animal science, 46(2), 1996, pp. 215-219
The cardiovascular and respiratory effects of three alpha(2)-adrenergi
c agonists (xylazine 2 mg/kg of body weight; detomidine, 40 mu g/kg; m
edetomidine, 40 mu g/kg) and their specific antagonist, atipamezole (2
00 mu g/kg) were examined in young, isoflurane-anesthetized (1.3% end-
tidal concentration) swine (weight range, 15 to 35 kg). The intravenou
s administration of all three alpha(2)-agonists caused an initial sign
ificant (P < 0.05) but short-lived increase in arterial blood pressure
, Atipamezole also increased blood pressure, and this effect persisted
throughout the period of observation, All agonists caused a sustained
significant bradycardia, whereas atipamezole significantly increased
heart rate (30 +/- 7 beats per min), The cardiac index tended to trans
iently decrease 5 to 10 min after agonist injection (significant only
for xylazine at 2 min after injection) from an average pre-injection v
alue of 166 ml/kg per min and did not change in response to atipamezol
e. None of the drugs significantly modified arterial blood gas (PaO2,
PaCO2) or pH values, Xylazine and medetomidine but not detomidine or a
tipamezole manifested short-lived analgesic properties in response to
clamping of the interdigital fold.