Clinically, bupivacaine has depressant effects on intraventricular conduction that may lead to serious atrioventricular blocks or reentrant arrhythmias at plasma levels below those required to produce these effects experimentally (2-3 micrograms/ml instead of 8-10 micrograms/ml). The difference could be due to drugs present in the blood at the time of regional anesthesia that similarly inhibit conduction. This hypothesis was examined in 30 anesthesized, closed-chest dogs by measuring conduction time in the ventricular contractile fibers as well as effective refractory period under pacing at a constant, relatively high (180 beats/minute) rate.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIntraventricular conduction disorders and reentrant arrhythmias in dogs can be produced by high plasma bupivacaine concentrations. The authors' aim was to determine if these conduction disturbances also occurred at moderate plasma bupivacaine concentrations (2.2-3.
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