Ag. Headrapson et al., PHARMACOKINETICS OF THE 3 ISOMERS OF MIVACURIUM AND PHARMACODYNAMICS OF THE CHIRAL MIXTURE IN HEPATIC CIRRHOSIS, British Journal of Anaesthesia, 73(5), 1994, pp. 613-618
We have studied the pharmokinetics of cis-trans, trans-trans and cis-c
is mivacurium in 10 healthy subjects and 11 patients with mild or mode
rate hepatic cirrhosis, during nitrous oxide-oxygen-isoflurane anaesth
esia. Mivacurium 15 mu g kg(-1) min(-1) was infused for 10 min (total
dose 0.15 mg kg(-1)) and the plasma concentration of the three isomers
measured at regular intervals for 190 min. The electromyographic resp
onse to the drug was also measured. Compartmental analysis of the resu
lting isomer profiles was undertaken: one- and two-compartment models
were fitted to derive clearance, volume of distribution and half-life.
Clearance of the cis-trans and trans-trans isomers was reduced signif
icantly in the cirrhotic compared with the healthy group: cis-trans (m
edian (range)) 44 (15-121) ml kg(-1) min(-1) vs 95 (57-213) ml kg(-1)
min(-1) (P < 0.05); trans-trans 32 (12-64) ml kg(-1) min(-1) vs 70 (34
-101) ml kg(-1) min(-1) (P < 0.05). The difference in the clearance of
the cis-cis isomer in the cirrhotic (4.2 (2.9-12.1) ml kg(-1) min(-1)
compared with the healthy group (5.2 (2.9-8.9) ml kg(-1) min(-1)) was
not significant with this sample size. Clearance of each isomer corre
lated significantly with plasma cholinesterase activity: cis-trans r =
0.73, P < 0.001; trans-trans r = 0.69, P < 0.001; cis-cis r = 0.48, P
< 0.05. Terminal half-life was prolonged significantly for the cis-tr
ans and trans-trans isomers in the cirrhotic patients compared with th
e healthy subjects: cis-trans 2.5 (1.3-64.6) min vs 1.5 (0.7-2.2) min
(P < 0.05); trans-trans 11.1 (2.8-36.9) min vs 2.3 (1.2-7.8) min (P <
0.001), but was not statistically significant for the cis-cis isomer:
60.8 (8.7-155) min vs 50.3 (12.6-237) min. Volume of distribution was
similar for all three isomers in the healthy and cirrhotic groups. Ons
et and recovery from neuromuscular block were slower in the cirrhotic
compared with the healthy group: time to 90% depression of T1/T0 6.8 (
5.8-11.5) min vs 5.9 (5.3-10.3) min (P < 0.05); recovery index (25-75%
recovery of T1/T0) 11.8 (5.6-26.3) min vs 7.4 (4.7-9.6) min (P < 0.01
). There was a significant negative correlation between all recovery v
ariables and plasma cholinesterase activity.