Succinylcholine
Revision as of 04:53, 13 March 2011 by Rossdonaldson1 (talk | contribs)
Contraindications
| Contraindication |
From-To |
| Known hyperK | current |
| Massive burns >10% BSA | >4dys-healed |
| Massive crush injuries | >4dys-healed |
| Denervation^ | >4dys-6mo |
| Neuromuscular dz^^ | indefinite |
| Intra-abdominal sepsis | >5dys-resolution |
| Increased ICP | may use w/ defacic dose |
^CVA (in particular those with residual deficits), spinal cord injury
^^ALS, MS, skeletal muscle myopathies, cholinesterase def, h/o malignant hyperthermia
- No evidence to support contraindication in penetrating eye injuries
- N.B. Myasthenia Gravis- theoretically need more succ to induce vs nondepolarizing agents which have a prolonged effect.
- This is 2/2 to lack of post-synaptic receptors, i.e. succ cannot potentiate a reaction 2/2 too few receptors.
- Vs. it takes few "molecules" of roc/vec to block the few remaining functioning receptors.
- Overall, most practitioners tend to avoid succ in all patients with possible neuromuscular disease.
Source
2/06 DONALDSON (Adapted from Rosen)
Levitan, R. Annals of EM. Vol 45, Issue 2. Safety of succinylcholine in myasthenia gravis.
