Effects of Fentanyl Versus Sufentanil in Equianesthetic Doses on Middle Cerebral Artery Blood Flow Velocity

1993 
BACKGROUND: Sufentanil has been reported to increase cerebral blood flow in comparison with fentanyl. However, because of the use of animal models, supraclinical doses and/or background anesthetic agents, the clinical applicability of these studies remains difficult to assess. Therefore, transcranial Doppler ultrasonography was used to determine the cerebral hemodynamic effects of equianesthetic doses of fentanyl and sufentanil on middle cerebral artery (MCA) blood flow velocity in patients without intracranial pathologic conditions. METHODS: Twenty-four unpremedicated American Society of Anesthesiologists physical status 1 and 2 patients undergoing elective nonintracranial neurosurgery were assigned randomly to receive equipotent blinded infusions of either sufentanil (15 micrograms/min) or fentanyl (150 micrograms/min) for anesthetic induction during spontaneous ventilation of 100% oxygen. Normocapnia, as measured by infrared capnography, was maintained by manually assisting ventilation, as necessary. The cerebral opioid effect was quantified using the spectral edge frequency parameter. The infusion was continued until either 1) spectral edge frequency decreased below 10 Hz or 2) 150 micrograms of sufentanil or 1,500 micrograms of fentanyl was infused, whichever occurred first. On average, the patients received 1.7 +/- 0.55 micrograms/kg or 16 +/- 4 micrograms/kg of sufentanil or fentanyl, respectively. The right MCA mean, peak systolic, and peak diastolic velocities and pulsatility index were measured continuously by transcranial Doppler ultrasonography. RESULTS: The mean arterial pressure decreased slightly in both groups, but only in the fentanyl group were the changes significant. The MCA velocity increased by approximately 25% in both groups. However, the relative changes in MCA velocity were not different between groups. The pulsatility indexes were unchanged in both groups. CONCLUSIONS: These data suggest that, at clinically relevant doses in the absence of other drugs, cerebral blood flow velocity is increased by both fentanyl and sufentanil. Furthermore, there appears to be no significant differences in the cerebral hemodynamic profiles of the two drugs, as assessed by transcranial Doppler ultrasonography.
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