Neuromuscular blocking drugs (NMBDs)
[CEACCP 2004 Vol 4(1) "Pharmacology of neuromuscular blocking drugs"]
Structure
- NMBD in use today are quaternary ammonium compounds
- Structurally related to acetylcholine (ACh)
* Which contains a quaternary nitrogen group (N+(NH3)3)
- The positive nitrogen atoms are attracted to the alpha subunits of postsynaptic nicotinic ACh receptor
- The two quaternary ammonium groups are separated by a bridging structure
--> The bridging structure is lipophilic and variable in size
* The bridge is a major determinant in potency
Structure-activity relationships
- Long and flexible structure of suxamethonium allows binding and activation of cholinergic receptors
- Bulky and rigid molecules are characteristic of non-depolarising NMBDs which binds, without activating, cholinergic receptors
Acetylcholine
- Acetylcholine has a positively charged quaternary ammonium group
--> Attaches to negatively charged cholinergic receptors
- Acetylcholine (and NMBDs) attaches to ACh receptors, not just at NMJ, but also:
* Cardiac muscarinic ACh receptors
* Autonomic ganglia nicotinic ACh receptors
--> Lack of specificity for the NMJ
Autonomic nAChR and NMJ nAChR
- Specificity of a drug for autonomic ganglia nAChR vs the NMJ nAChR
--> Influenced by the length of carbon chain separating two positively charged ammonium groups
- Maximal autonomic ganglion blockade occurs when the positive charges are separated by 6 carbon atoms
- NMJ blockade occurs when positive charges are separated by 10 carbon atoms.
- Thus, a bulky monoquaternary molecule like d-tubocurarine (dTc) is more likely to produce autonomic ganglion blockade than is a bisquaternary drug
Usage
- Skeletal muscle relaxation
* Facilitate tracheal intubation
* Improve surgical working condition during general anaesthesia
- Tracheal intubation
--> 2 x the ED95 dose of nondepolarising NMBDs is often recommended
- Surgical working condition
--> 90% suppression of single-twitch response is often considered adequate
NB:
- NMBDs lack analgesic and CNS depressant action
- Laryngospasm can be treated with suxamethonium dose as low as 0.1mg/kg IV
Classification
Depolarising vs non-depolarising
Depolarising
Only one still in clinical use is suxamethonium (aka succinylcholine)
Non-depolarising
- Benzylisoquinolinium compounds
- Aminosteroid
Benzylisoquinolinium compounds
- Include:
* Atracurium
* Mivacurium
* Doxacurium
* Cisatracurium
* Tubocurarine and other toxiferine derivatives
- Consists of two quaternary ammonium groups, joined by a thin chain of methyl groups
- More liable to breakdown in plasma than aminosteroids
- Lack vagolytic effects
- More likely to cause histamine release
* Presumably due to presence of a tertiary amine
NB:
[PHW2:p76]
- Isoquinolinium is related to papaverine (which is a smooth muscle relaxant)
- Benzylisoquinolinium has two isoquinolinium structures, linked by a carbon chain containing two ester linkages
Aminosteroid compounds
- Include:
* Pancuronium
* Vecuronium
* Pipecuronium
* Rocuronium
* Rapacuronium
- Contains an androstane skeleton, with ACh-like moieties at the A ring and D ring
- Most depend on organs for excretion
- Tend not to cause histamine release
- Some undergo deacetylation in liver
Bisquaternary amine vs monoquaternary amine
Bisquaternary amines
- Two quaternary ammonium cations
- e.g. succinylcholine, pancuronium, atracurium
- More potent than monoquaternary amines
Monoquaternary amines
- One quaternary ammonium cation and a tertiary amine
- e.g. rocuronium, tubocurarine, and vecuronium
- At physiological pH, the tertiary amine can become protonated
--> Increased potency
--> More potent in acidosis
Pharmacodynamics
NMBDs produce one of the following
* Phase I depolarising blockade
* Phase II depolarising blockade
* Non-depolarising neuromuscular blockade
Muscle relaxation
Onset differences in different muscles
NMBDs affects
- Small, rapid moving muscles (e.g. eyes, digits)
* Onset at larygneal muscle before peripheral muscles (adductor pollicis)
- Muscles in trunk and abdomen
- Intercostal muscles
- Diaphragm
Recovery occurs in reverse order
* i.e. Diaphragm recovers first
Different order listed in Miller
[RDM6:p503-504]
- Onset of NMJ blockade in laryngeal adductors, diaphragm, and masseter are
* Faster
* Laster a shorter time
* Recover faster
(than adductor pollicis)
- The difference is probably mostly due to differences in regional blood flow
* High blood flow in diagphram and larynx allows exposure to a higher peak plasma concentration
- NMJ blockade by non-depolarising NMBDs at larynx
* Onset occurs 1-2 minutes earlier than at adductor pollicis
* Pattern of blockade (onset, depth, and speed of recovery) is similar to orbicularis oculi
Muscle types
- Muscles involved in glottis closure (thyroarytenoid muscles)
* Fast muscle fibre
* Greater density of ACh receptors
--> More receptors need to be occupied to block a fast muscle
- Adductor pollicis
* Slow fibre
Vocal cord
- Rapid action at vocal cord
--> Due to faster equilibration time between the plasma concentration and the concentration at the airway muscles
- With short and intermediate acting NMBDs, the period of laryngeal paralysis
* Brief
* May be dissipating before maximal effect is reached at the adductor pollicis
Diaphragm
- Diaphragm requires about twice the dose as that required to achieve the same degree of paralysis at adductor pollicis muscle
Adductor pollicis
- Adductor pollicis is a poor indication of laryngeal relaxation (cricothyroid muscle)
- Facial nerve stimulation (and orbicularis oculi muscle contraction) reflects the onset of neuromuscular blockade at the diaphragm
--> Orbicularis oculi may be a better indicator of laryngeal muscle blockade
Orbicularis oculi
[SH4:p242]
- Loss of function at orbicularis oculi
* Correlates with maximal paralysis of laryngeal adductor muscles and diaphragm
* Better than adductor pollicis
Pharmacokinetics
- Equal potency between NMBDs is determined by measuring the dose needed to produce 95% suppression of the single-twitch response (ED95)
Distribution
- NMBDs are NOT highly bound to plasma proteins
* <50%
* Changes in protein binding is unlikely to affect renal excretion of NMBDs
- Quaternary ammonium groups
--> Highly ionised
* Water soluble at physiological pH
* Limited lipid solubility
Thus,
- Vd is limited and close to ECF (20%)
- NMBDs do not cross lipid membranes easily (BBB, renal tubuar epithelium, GIT epithelium, placenta)
* No CNS effects
* Minimal renal tubular reabsorption
* Ineffective oral absorption
* Maternal administration does not affect foetus
Elimination
Clearance, Vd, and elimination half-time are influenced by
- Age
- Volatile anaesthetic agents
- Hepatic or renal disease
* Renal disease can greatly influence the pharmacokinetics of long-acting nondepolarising NMBDs
Action profile
- Plasma level of a long-acting NMBDs decreases in two phases
* Rapid decline due to redistribution
* Slower decline due to clearance
- Elimination half-time of NMBD are poorly correlated with the duration of action
Clinical
Interaction
Inhaled anaesthetic agents
- Volatile anaesthetics greatly decreases the ED95 of NMBDs
- Inhaled anaesthetic agents do NOT affect pharmacokinetics
- Inhaled anaesthetic agents affect pharmacodynamics of NMBDs
* Lower plasma concentration is needed to achieve the same degree of blockade
Choice of drugs
- Rapid onset and brief duration:
* Suxamethonium
* Mivacurium (to some extent)
- Rocuronium also provide rapid onset of action
* Fast enough to mimic suxamethonium
* But prolonged duration of action
- Atracurium or mivacurium
--> Significant decrease in BP due to histamine release
- Pancuronium
--> Increase in HR
- Devoid of circulatory effects
* Vecuronium, rocuronium, cisatracurium, doxacurium, pipecuronium
Trivia
History
- Purified fractions of d-tubocurarine (dTc)
* First used to control tetanus muscle spasm in 1932
* In 1942, first used in surgery (appendicecetomy) by Griffith and Johnson
- Suxamethonium is first researched in 1906 for its parasympathomimetic effects
* Muscle relaxation property recognised in 1949
- Pancuronium introduced in 1960
- 1980, atracurium and benzylisoquinoline introduced
- 1995, cisatracurium introduced
- ??? 1996, rocuronium
- 1997, mivacurium introduced