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Mivacurium in infants and children
Author(s) -
GOUDSOUZIAN NISHAN
Publication year - 1997
Publication title -
pediatric anesthesia
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.704
H-Index - 82
eISSN - 1460-9592
pISSN - 1155-5645
DOI - 10.1046/j.1460-9592.1997.d01-74.x
Subject(s) - medicine , neostigmine , edrophonium , anesthesia , cholinesterase , muscle relaxant
Mivacurium is the only available short‐acting nondepolarizing muscle relaxant in clinical use. It is a bis‐quaternary benzylisoquinolinium ester hydrolysed by plasma‐cholinesterase into inactive compounds. The ED 50 and ED 95 in children are about 50 μg·kg −1 and 90 μg·kg −1 respectively. In infants, they have a tendency to be lower. A standard intubating dose of 0.25 mg·kg −1 causes complete neuromuscular depression in 1.5–2 min, recovery to 5% in 6–10 min, and complete recovery in 15–20 min. The recent tendency is to use 0.3 mg·kg −1 to obtain better intubating conditions with slight prolongation of effect. Since the recovery profile of mivacurium is independent of the dose and duration, it is most suitable for administration by continuous infusion. The infusion requirement in children is 10–16 μg·kg −1 min −1 , which is about twice that of adults. Cutaneous flushes from histamine release are commonly seen with the larger doses of mivacurium; however, the associated hypotensive effects are minimal and counteracted by the tracheal intubation. The duration of action of mivacurium is prolonged in patients with cholinesterase deficiency. Mivacurium's neuromuscular effects can be satisfactorily antagonized by edrophonium or neostigmine.

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