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Canadian Journal of Anesthesia, Vol 29, 577-580, Copyright © 1982 by Canadian Anesthesiologists' Society
1 Department of Anaesthesia, The Montreal General Hospital and McGill University
For reprints and correspondence: Dr. D.A. Magee, Senior Registrar in Anaesthesia, Regional Hospital, Galway, County Galway, Ireland.
Pretreatment with small (10 mg) doses of succinylcholine ("self-taming") decreases the incidence of muscle fasciculations following succinylcholine administration and may decrease the incidence of other unwanted effects. This study was designed to assess the cardiac effects of such self-taming and to assess the degree of protection afforded against bradydysrhythmias following subsequent succinylcholine administration. Sixty patients were studied and allocated randomly to three groups of twenty. Each group was assigned a different form of pretreatment. Patients in group I received 10 mg of succinylcholine immediately after induction. Patients in group II were treated with d-tubocurarine 0.04 mg·kg-1 three minutes before induction. Patients in group III received no pretreatment. All patients were induced with thiopentone 4 mg·kg-1 followed by succinylcholine 1 mg·kg-1 45 seconds later. A second dose of succinylcholine 1 mg·kg-1 was administered to the patients in the two pretreatment groups between four and five minutes after the first dose of succinylcholine. Following both the first and second doses of succinylcholine patients in the self-taming group showed a significantly greater incidence of bradydysrhythmias when compared to the other two groups. It is concluded that the use of a self-taming technique is potentially hazardous, and that it does not confer protection against repeated succinylcholine administration.
Key Words: NEUROMUSCULAR RELAXANTS, succinylcholine, d-tubocurarine COMPLICATIONS, bradydysrhythmia
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