Suxamethonium
[CEACCP 2004 Vol 4(1) "Pharmacology of neuromuscular blocking drugs"; SH4:p216-219]
- The only depolarising NMBD still in clinical use is suxamethonium
- Aka succinylcholine or scoline
Structure
- Suxamethonium is two acetylcholine molecules joined together by their acetyl groups
- The two ends have a quaternary ammonium group each
Pharmacodynamics
Mechanism of action
- Depolarising NMBDs are agonists at ACh receptor
* Suxamethonium is a partial agonist
- Quaternary ammonium groups in suxamethonium bind to the two alpha-subunits of a nicotinic ACh receptor
--> Ligand-gated channel opens
--> Depolarisation
--> Threshold potential reached
--> Voltage-gated Na+ channel opens and action potential is generated
- Voltage-gated Na+ channel first open, then close and becomes inactivated
* Membrane potential must be restored before these voltage-gated Na+ channels can be re-activated
- Normally, with ACh, the process is very quick because ACh is broken down by acetylcholinesterase
--> nACh receptor closes
--> Membrane potential is restored
- Suxamethonium is NOT metabolised by acetylcholinesterase
--> Ligand-gated channel is kept open
--> Membrane potential not restored
--> Voltage-gated Na+ channels stay inactivated
--> Junctional transmission is blocked (Phase I block)
--> Muscle becomes flaccid
NB:
- Nicotinic ACh receptor is a ligand-gated channel
* When open, it allows cations such as Na+, K+, Ca2+ to go through
* But mostly Na+
- Prolonged opening of junctional nAChRs
--> Leakage of K+ from muscle cells
--> Serum K+ concentration increase by 0.5 mEq/L on average
- Suxamethonium also act on presynaptic nAChRs, but the effect is minor
Effects
- Relaxation of skeletal muscles
* Phase I blockade
- No direct action on smooth muscles (including uterus)
Side effects
Adverse side effects of suxamethonium include:
- Cardiac dysrhythmia
- Hyperkalaemia
- Myalgia
- Sustained skeletal muscle contraction
- Myoglobinuria
- Increased gastric pressure
- Increased intraocular pressure (IOP)
- Increased incracranial pressure (ICP)
- Can trigger malignant hyperthermia
Cardiac dysrhythmia
- Suxamethonium may on cardiac muscarinic cholinergic receptors
--> Mimic effect of ACh
--> Leads to sinus bradycardia, junctional rhythm, or sinus arrest
* More pronounced in paediatric patients
- More likely to occur when second dose of suxamethonium is administered 5 minutes after the first dose
* Possible bradycardic role of metabolites (succinylmonocholine and choline)
- Increase in HR and BP may also occur due to actions on autonomic nervous system
Hyperkalaemia
- Suxamethonium 1mg/kg
--> An increase of approximately 0.5 mmol/L in serum K+ concentration
- Increase in K+ is more pronounced in:
* Clinically unrecognised muscular dystrophy
* Unhealed 3rd degree burn
* Denervation leading to skeletal muscle dystrophy
* Severe skeletal muscle trauma
* Upper motor neuron lesion
- Extrajunctional nAChRs is responsible for hyperkalaemia in denervation and UMN lesion
- Not influenced by pretreatment with nonparalysing dose of nondepolarising NMBDs
Hyperkalaemia and muscular disorder
- Use of suxamethonium in some male children with undiagnosed myopathy
--> Muscle contractures
--> Rhabdomyolysis and hyperkalaemia
- Duchenne muscular dystrophy (1 in 3,300 male) is the most common
* X-linked
- Becker muscular dystrophy (1 in 33,000 male)
* X-linked (tend to manifest in male children)
Myalgia
[CEACCP]
- Worse in ambulatory patients
- More common in the young and healthy with a large muscle mass
Myoglobinuria
- Reflect skeletal muscle damage
- Occurs in paediatrics, rarely in adults
* Reason unknown
Increased intragastric pressure
- Suxamethonium produces increase in intragastric pressure
* Related to the intensity of skeletal muscle faciculation
* Highly variable
- Also associated with corresponding increase in lower oesophageal sphincter pressure
--> No increased tendency to regurgitation [CEACCP]
- In paediatric population
--> Skeletal muscle faciculation is minimal to absent
--> Tend not to have the increased intragastric pressure
Increased intraocular pressure
- Suxamethonium causes maximal increase in IOP about 2-4 minutes after administration
* Average increase = 4-8 mmHg
- The increase in IOP lasts for about 5-10 minutes
- Mechanism unknown (most likely multifactorial)
* Increases iin choroidal blood volume
* Extra-ocular muscle tone
* Aqueous humour outflow resistance
- Traditionally, suxamethonium is avoided in open eye injury
* Due to concerns over expulsion of global content
* But the theory never really be substantiated
Increased intracranial pressure
- Not consistently observed
Sustained skeletal muscle contraction
- In children, incomplete jaw relaxation and masseter jaw rigidity is not uncommon
* Incidence = 4.4% in paediatrics
* Considered normal
- Must differentiate from response to malignant hyperthermia
- Sustained skeletal muscle contraction may occur in
* Myotonia congenita
* Myotonia dystrophica
--> May interfere with ventilation and become life-threatening
Precurarisation
- Pretreatment of a nonparalysing dose of nondepolarising NMBDs could decrease or prevent the occurrence of:
* Cardiac dysrhythmia
* Myalgia
* Increased intragastric pressure
* Increased intraocular pressure
- Pretreatment does NOT influence the magnitude of K+ increase
- Precurarisation reduces the potency of suxamethonium
--> Larger dose is required
Pharmacokinetics
Absorption
IV, IM
Metabolism
- Suxamethonium is rapidly hydrolysed by plasma cholinesterase (pseudocholinesterase) before reaching NMJ
* See [Esterases]
- Initial metabolite = succinylmonocholine
--> Much weaker NMBDs (about 1/20 to 1/80 the potency)
- Succinylmonocholine is subsequently hydrolysed
--> Succinic acid and choline
- Metabolism is prolonged in patients with atypical plasma cholinesterase
* See [Atypical plasma cholinesterase]
Elimination
- About 10% excreted in urine unchanged [PI]
Action profile
IV
- Onset of action = 30-60 seconds
- Duration of action = 3-5 minutes
IM
- Onset of action = 2-3 minutes
- Duration of action = 10-30 minutes
Pharmaceutics
Presentation
Storage
- Store at 2-8 degrees Celcius
Clinical
Administration
There is a wide variability in responses to suxamethonium
--> There is no single perfect intubating dose
- Endotracheal intubation dose
= 0.5 - 1 mg/kg [SH4:p216]
= 1-1.5 mg/kg [SH4:p217; CEACCP article]
= 0.6 mg/kg IV (range 0.3-1.1 mg/kg) [PI]
- In paediatric
* IV dose = 1-2 mg/kg
* IM dose = up to 2.5mg/kg
* Should not exceed 150mg
ED95
- ED95 for suxamethonium is 0.27mg/kg IV
--> Normal dose of 1mg/kg is 3-4 times the ED95
- Reduction of dose to 0.6mg/kg still produce acceptable intubating condition
* But diaphragm recovery is not faster
- Spontaneous breathing may start within 5 minutes of suxamethonium 1mg/kg
* But 90% twitch height recovery is greater than 10 minutes (or 12-15 minutes [CEACCP])
--> Diaphragm recovers BEFORE adductor pollicis muscle
NB:
- A preoxygenated healthy adult can experience 8 minutes of apnoea before PaO2 decreases to 90%
Contraindication
Contraindicated in:
- History of malignant hyperthermia
- Plasma cholinesterase abnormalty
* Genetic (atypical plasma cholinesterase)
* Severe liver disease
* Drug-induced (neostigmine, metoclopramide)
- Duchenne's muscular dystrophy, Becker's muscular dystrophy
- Myopatheis associated with elevated creatinine phosphokinase (CPK) values
- Allergy
- Severe hyperkalaemia
- Acute narrow angle glaucoma
- Open eye injury
Interaction
- Digoxin or verapamil
--> Increased risk of cardiac arrhythmia
- Drugs that may prolong the effect of suxamethonium include:
* Lignocaine
* Oxytocin
* Oral contraceptive pills
* Some nonpenicillin antibiotics (e.g. gentamicin, tobramycin)
* Beta-adrenergic blockers (propanolol)
* Phenytoin, carbamazepine
* Magnesium
* Cimetidine
* Quinine, chloroquine
* Terbutaline
* High dose corticosteroids
* Cytostatic agents (e.g. cyclophosphamide, azathioprine)
- Duration of non-NMBDs administered subsequent to suxamethonium may be increased
Special considerations
Malignant hyperthermia
- Suxamethonium is a recognised trigger of MH
Hypersensitivity
- 1 in 4000
- Hypersensitivity reaction to suxamethonium tend to be classic Type 1 anaphylaxis
- Accounts for 50% of hypersensitivity reactions to NMBDs
Eletrolyte imbalance
- Hypokalaemia or hypocalcaemia require reduced doses of suxamethonium
* [PI on MIMS]
Obesity
- Obesity is associated with increased activity of plasma cholinesterase
--> Higher doses may be required (if dosage is based on lean body mass)
Paediatrics
- IV bolus of suxamethonium may result in profound bradycardia or even asystole
* More common after a second dose
* Pre-treatment with atropine reduce the risk of bradycardia
- In male paediatric patients, risk of undiagnosed myopathy
Pregnancy
- Pregnancy is associated with decreased plasma cholinesterase activity
* 40% [SH4:p218] or 25% [PI] decrease
* But duration of action might not be significantly increased due to increased Vd
- Category A
* But according to PI, safety with regard to foetal development has not been established
Myasthenia gravis
- In myasthenia gravis
--> Decrease in functional nAChRs
--> Decreased response to ACh (and thus suxamethonium)
--> ED95 is 2.6 times the normal (i.e. higher doses required)
* [SH4:p219]