Anesth Analg 2006;102:1419-1426
© 2006 International Anesthesia Research Society
doi: 10.1213/01.ane.0000204258.00676.98
ANESTHETIC PHARMACOLOGY
The Minimum Alveolar Anesthetic Concentration of 2-, 3-, and 4-Alcohols and Ketones in Rats: Relevance to Anesthetic Mechanisms
Albert Won, MS*,
Irene Oh, BS*,
Mark Liao, BS*,
James M. Sonner, MD*,
R. Adron Harris, PhD ,
Michael J. Laster, DVM*,
Robert Brosnan, DVM, PhD*,
James R. Trudell, PhD , and
Edmond I. Eger, II, MD*
*From the Department of Anesthesia and Perioperative Care, University of California, San Francisco, California; Institute for Cellular and Molecular Biology, University of Texas, Austin, Texas, and Department of Anesthesia, Stanford University School of Medicine, Stanford, California
Address correspondence and reprint requests to Dr. Edmond I. Eger II, Department of Anesthesia, S-455, University of California, San Francisco, CA 94143-0464. Address e-mail to egere{at}anesthesia.ucsf.edu.
The Meyer-Overton hypothesis predicts that anesthetic potency correlates inversely with lipophilicity; e.g., MAC times the olive oil/gas partition coefficient equals a constant of approximately 1.82 ± 0.56 atm (mean ± sd) for conventional inhaled anesthetics. MAC is the minimum alveolar concentration of anesthetic required to eliminate movement in response to a noxious stimulus in 50% of subjects. In contrast to conventional inhaled anesthetics, MAC times the olive oil/gas partition coefficient for normal alcohols from methanol through octanol equals a constant one tenth as large as that for conventional inhaled anesthetics. The alcohol (C-OH) group causes a great affinity of alcohols to water, and the C-OH may tether the alcohol at the hydrophobic-hydrophilic interface where anesthetics are thought to act. We hypothesized that the position of the C-OH group determined potency, perhaps by governing the maximum extent to which the acyl portion of the molecule might extend into a hydrophobic phase. Using the same reasoning, we added studies of ketones with similar numbers of carbon atoms between the C=O group and the terminal methyl group. The results for both alcohols and ketones showed the predicted correlation, but the correlation was no better than that with carbon chain length regardless of the placement of the oxygen. The oil/gas partition coefficient predicted potency as well as, or better than, either chain length or oxygen placement. Hydrophilicity, as indicated by the saline/gas partition coefficient, also seemed to influence potency.
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J. G. Bovill
Anesthetic Pharmacology: Reflections of a Section Editor
Anesth. Analg.,
November 1, 2007;
105(5):
1186 - 1190.
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