Hepatic effects of inhalational anaesthetic agents
[SH4:p64]
Hepatic blood flow
- Isoflurane, sevoflurane, desflurane causes vasodilation in hepatic circulation
* Hepatic blood flow is maintained
* Portal vein blood flow is increased
- Halothane causes vasoconstriction in hepatic circulation
Drug clearance
- Inhalational anaesthetic agents causes decrease in hepatic metabolic clearance of drugs such as propranolol
* By >50%
Liver function tets
- Enflurane and desflurane cause transient increases in plasma alanine aminotransferase
- Isoflurane and desflurane cause transient increases in plasma alpha glutathione transferase
- Hepatic dysfunction is most likely to be due to inadequate hepatocyte oxygenation
* Enzyme induction increases O2 demand and increases risk of inadequate oxygenation
Hepatotoxicity
Halothane
Two types of hepatotoxicity:
- Mild, self-limited form
- Severe, rare form
Mild form of halothane hepatotoxicity
- Incidence
= ~20% of postop patients
- Nonspecific drug effect
* Due to decrease in hepatic blood flow
--> Reduced hepatic oxygenation
- Symptoms and signs:
* Fever
* Lethargy
* Nausea
* Minor increase in liver transaminase
Halothane hepatitis
- Incidence
= 1 in 10,000 to 30,000
- Immune-mediated
- Symptoms and signs:
* Fever
* Rash
* Arthralgia
* Eosinophilia
- Risk factors
* Female gender
* Middle age
* Obesity
* Prior exposure to halothane
* Family history
Mechanism
- Formation of reactive oxidative trifluoroacetyl (TFA) halide metabolite
--> Covalently bound to liver microsomal proteins on hepatocyte surfaces
--> Neoantigens
--> Triggers immune response
- Metabolism of halothane is genetically determined
Evidence of immunogenic basis
- Presence of IgG antibodies in at least 70% of patients
* Directed against liver microsomal proteins
Enflurane, isoflurane, and desflurane
- Mild self-limited hepatic dysfunction can also happen with enflurane, isoflurane, and desflurane
* Related to inadequate hepatocyte oxygenation
Immune-mediated hepatitis can also occur:
- Much lower incidence due to lower metabolism
- Risk is increased when patient has previously been sensitized against trifluoroacetyl proteins
- Overall risk (after previous exposure to halothane) is probably less than overall risk of anaesthetics
Sevoflurane
- Due to chemical structure of sevoflurane, metabolism of sevoflurane cannot lead to production of acetyl halide
--> Cannot form trifluoroacetylated liver protein
--> Cannot cause immune-mediated hepatitis or cross-reaction
- Compound A is hepatotoxic in animals
* But concentration in circuit is far lower than toxic level in animals
* Compound A is also nephrotoxic