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RESEARCH PRODUCT

The acute myotoxic effects of bupivacaine and ropivacaine after continuous peripheral nerve blockades.

Wolfgang ZinkChristoph SeifJ??rgen R. E. BohlNicola HackePeter M. BraunBarbara SinnerEike MartinRainer H. A. FinkAnd Bernhard M. Graf

subject

medicine.medical_specialtyTissue Fixationmedicine.drug_classSwinemedicine.medical_treatmentMyotoxinMuscle Fibers SkeletalFemoral nerveMuscular DiseasesPeripheral nervemedicineIn Situ Nick-End LabelingAnimalsEdemaRopivacainePeripheral NervesAnesthetics LocalMuscle SkeletalBupivacaineLocal anestheticbusiness.industryRopivacaineNerve BlockAmidesBupivacaineSurgeryMicroscopy ElectronAnesthesiology and Pain MedicineAnesthesiaToxicityNerve blockSwine MiniatureFemalebusinessmedicine.drug

description

Bupivacaine causes muscle damage. However, the myotoxic potency of ropivacaine is still unexplored. Therefore, we performed this study to compare the effects of bupivacaine and ropivacaine on skeletal muscle tissue in equipotent concentrations. Femoral nerve catheters were inserted into anesthetized minipigs, and 20 mL of either bupivacaine (5 mg/mL) or ropivacaine (7.5 mg/mL) was injected. Subsequently, bupivacaine (2.5 mg/mL) and ropivacaine (3.75 mg/mL) were continuously infused over 6 h. Control animals were treated with corresponding volumes of normal saline. Finally, muscle samples were dissected at injection sites. After processing and staining, histological patterns of muscle damage were blindly examined, scored (0 = no damage to 3 = myonecrosis), and statistically analyzed. After normal saline, only interstitial edema was found. Bupivacaine treatment caused severe tissue damage (score, 2.3 +/- 0.7), whereas ropivacaine induced fiber injury of a significantly smaller extent (score, 1.3 +/- 0.8). Furthermore, bupivacaine, but not ropivacaine, induced apoptosis in muscle fibers. In summary, both drugs induce muscle damage with similar histological patterns. Compared with bupivacaine, which induces both necrosis and apoptosis, the tissue damage caused by ropivacaine is significantly less severe. We conclude that ropivacaine's myotoxic potential is more moderate in comparison with that of bupivacaine.After continuous peripheral nerve blockades, the long-acting local anesthetics bupivacaine and ropivacaine both induce fiber necrosis in porcine skeletal muscle tissue. In comparison with ropivacaine, bupivacaine causes tissue damage of a significantly larger extent and additionally induces apoptosis in skeletal muscle cells.

10.1213/01.ane.0000080610.14265.c8https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/14500177