
The Effect of a Tetanic Stimulus on the Response to Subsequent Tetanic Stimulation
Author(s) -
David G. Silverman,
Sorin J. Brull
Publication year - 1993
Publication title -
anesthesia and analgesia/anesthesia and analgesia
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.404
H-Index - 201
eISSN - 1526-7598
pISSN - 0003-2999
DOI - 10.1213/00000539-199376060-00017
Subject(s) - tetanic stimulation , medicine , stimulation , anesthesia , fade , stimulus (psychology) , psychology , long term potentiation , receptor , computer science , psychotherapist , operating system
We evaluated the effect of tetanic stimulation (5 s, 50 Hz, 60 mA) on the response to tetanic stimulation delivered 2 min (TET@2) and 5 min (TET@5) later in 22 anesthetized patients receiving a vecuronium infusion. Once a consistent mechanomyographic train-of-four ratio was obtained at the adductor pollicis muscle, the first (baseline) tetanic stimulus was delivered. Tetanic sequences were repeated randomly after 2- and 5-min intervals. Tetanic fade was consistent among the study periods: the tetanic fade ratio for the first second of tetanus was 0.35 during baseline tetanic stimulation, 0.32 during TET@2 (P = NS by paired t-test), and 0.33 during TET@5 (P = NS). The respective fade ratios for the entire 5-s period were 0.15, 0.15 (P = NS), and 0.14 (P = NS). In contrast, the peak tetanic height increased from 10.8 mm at baseline to 11.3 mm at TET@2 (P < 0.05), and 11.3 mm at TET@5 (P < 0.05). We conclude that, in light of the consistency exhibited by tetanic fade, the small change in twitch height is clinically insignificant.