Class:
General anesthetic and adjunct to general anesthesia
Description:
Etomidate is a short-acting, intravenously administered sedative hypnotic. Etomidate has a rapid onset of action and recovery. It has minimal cardiac and respiratory-depressive effects and causes no histamine release, so it is useful in patients with compromised cardiopulmonary function.
Mechanism of Action:
Etomidate appears to facilitate GABAminergic neurotransmission by increasing the number of available GABA receptors, possibly by displacing endogenous inhibitors of GABA binding. Etomidate produces clinical responses such as hypnosis, elevations in arterial carbon dioxide tension, reduced cortisol plasma levels, and a transient 20—30% decrease in cerebral blood flow. Its effects are at least partially due to depression of the brainstem reticular formation.
Indications:
Induction of general anesthesia.
Contraindications:
Use with caution in the elderly and in patients with hepatic disease because they are more likely to develop etomidate-related adverse reactions.
Precautions:
Use with caution during lactation.
Side Effects:
Skeletal muscle: Myoclonic skeletal muscle movements, tonic movements. Respiratory: Apnea of short duration, hyperventilation or hypoventilation, laryngospasm. CV: Either hypertension or hypotension; tachycardia or bradycardia; arrhythmias. GI: Postoperative N&V. Miscellaneous: Eye movements, averting movements, hiccoughs, snoring.
Interactions:
Etomidate potentiates the effects of CNS depressants such as ethanol, general anesthetics, local anesthetics, antidepressants, H1-blockers, opiate agonists, skeletal muscle relaxants, phenothiazines, barbiturates, and benzodiazepines. Concurrent use of antihypertensive agents and etomidate can result in hypotension. This is particularly true if any of the following agents are used with etomidate: calcium-channel blockers, diazoxide, mecamylamine.
Dosing: 0.3mg/kg IVP