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Rapacuronium: clinical pharmacology

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  16 August 2006

R. K. Mirakhur
Affiliation:
Department of Anaesthetics and Intensive Care Medicine, The Queen's University of Belfast, Whitla Medical Building, 97 Lisburn Road, Belfast BT9 7BL, Northern Ireland, UK
K. C. McCourt
Affiliation:
Department of Clinical Anaesthesia, Royal Group of Hospitals, Belfast, Northern Ireland, UK
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Abstract

The need for a rapid-acting non-depolarizing neuromuscular blocking agent with a short duration of action resulted in the synthesis of rapacuronium. The onset of maximum block with rapacuronium occurs in 60–90 s with doses of 1.5–2.5 mg kg−1 with a duration of clinical relaxation of 15–30 min. Rapacuronium provides clinically acceptable intubating conditions in 60 s in a majority of patients with these doses, although the conditions are somewhat inferior to those obtained with succinylcholine in lightly anaesthetized patients, such as those undergoing a rapid-sequence induction. The main drawbacks of rapacuronium are the occurrence of dose-related pulmonary side-effects (increased airway pressure and/or overt bronchospasm) and hypotension and tachycardia. The cause of pulmonary side-effects is not certain but these have been serious enough to make its worldwide introduction doubtful.

Type
Original Article
Copyright
2001 European Society of Anaesthesiology

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