The aim of this clinical trial is to evaluate the ratio of hypnotic to analgesic potency of sevoflurane and desflurane at equi-minimum alveolar concentration using SPI and EEG analysis.
Anesthetic agents vary in their relative hypnotic potency. Recent studies demonstrated that equi-minimum alveolar concentration of various volatile anesthetic agents may produce different spectral entropy or bispectral index values. However, there is no study that demonstrate the difference between analgesic potency of volatile anesthetics. The aim of this clinical trial is to evaluate the ratio of hypnotic to analgesic potency of sevoflurane and desflurane at equi-minimum alveolar concentration using SPI and EEG analysis.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
PREVENTION
Masking
TRIPLE
Enrollment
90
Anesthesia was maintained with sevoflurane in patients undergoing standardized nociceptive stimulus (long-lasting tetanic stimulus of the ulnar nerve; 30 s, 50 mA, 50 Hz, square-wave).
Anesthesia was maintained with desflurane in patients undergoing standardized nociceptive stimulus (long-lasting tetanic stimulus of the ulnar nerve; 30 s, 50 mA, 50 Hz, square-wave).
Kangbuk Samsung Hospital
Seoul, South Korea
Surgical pleth index
The analgesic potency of volatile anesthetics was evaluated by surgical pleth index during standardized nociceptive stimulus (30 s, 50 mA, 50 Hz tetanic stimulation).
Time frame: the 10 min at steady-state anesthesia after endotracheal intubation
Bispectral index
The hypnotic potency of volatile anesthetics was evaluated by bispectral index during standardized nociceptive stimulus (30 s, 50 mA, 50 Hz tetanic stimulation).
Time frame: the 10 min at steady-state anesthesia after endotracheal intubation
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