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Thoracic epidural analgesia prolongs postoperative QT interval on electrocardiogram in major non-cardiac surgery: a randomized comparison and a prospective cohort analysis

Introduction: Prolongation of QT interval on electrocardiogram can be associated with perioperative lethal arrhythmia. Epidural analgesia is a commonly used modality to relieve surgical pain by blocking sensory nerves, which also blocks the autonomic nervous system and can affect QT interval. Since...

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Autores principales: Hori, Kotaro, Tsujikawa, Shogo, Egami, Mika, Waki, Sayaka, Watanabe, Ryota, Hino, Hideki, Matsuura, Tadashi, Mori, Takashi
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Frontiers Media S.A. 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10235468/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37274100
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fphar.2023.936242
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author Hori, Kotaro
Tsujikawa, Shogo
Egami, Mika
Waki, Sayaka
Watanabe, Ryota
Hino, Hideki
Matsuura, Tadashi
Mori, Takashi
author_facet Hori, Kotaro
Tsujikawa, Shogo
Egami, Mika
Waki, Sayaka
Watanabe, Ryota
Hino, Hideki
Matsuura, Tadashi
Mori, Takashi
author_sort Hori, Kotaro
collection PubMed
description Introduction: Prolongation of QT interval on electrocardiogram can be associated with perioperative lethal arrhythmia. Epidural analgesia is a commonly used modality to relieve surgical pain by blocking sensory nerves, which also blocks the autonomic nervous system and can affect QT interval. Since patient monitoring becomes much less frequent after surgery than intraoperative period, we investigated the effects of epidural analgesia on postoperative QT interval with a randomized clinical trial and a prospective cohort study. Methods: In a randomized study, we assigned 60 patients undergoing thoracic epidural analgesia to an epidural analgesia or no-epidural analgesia group, in which 3 ml/h of 0.25% epidural levobupivacaine (7.5 mg/h) was administered only in the epidural analgesia group during surgery. The primary outcome was the postoperative heart rate-corrected QT interval. In a prospective cohort study, patients were assigned to receive 5 ml/h epidural levobupivacaine (12.5 mg/h). The plasma concentration of levobupivacaine was measured using liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry. Results: The median postoperative corrected QT interval interval with 3 ml/h epidural levobupivacaine was significantly longer than that without epidural analgesia. Using multiple regression analysis for the factors known to affect postoperative corrected QT interval interval, epidural analgesia was found to be an independent variable for prolongation, and the mean difference of the corrected QT interval interval with or without epidural analgesia was 23 ms after adjustment. The median plasma concentration of levobupivacaine at the end of surgery was 164 ng/ml with 3 ml/h epidural levobupivacaine, and the correlation coefficient to the postoperative corrected QT interval interval was 0.14, showing a not significant correlation. A prospective cohort study showed that 5 ml/h epidural levobupivacaine significantly prolonged postoperative corrected QT interval interval compared to preoperative baseline. The median plasma concentration of levobupivacaine was 166 ng/ml with 5 ml/h, the correlation coefficient of which showed no significant correlation. Conclusion: Thoracic epidural analgesia could enhance postoperative corrected QT interval prolongation after general anesthesia. The mechanism is possibly caused by blocking neighboring or part of the cardiac sympathetic nerves, rather than by systemic effects of epidurally administered levobupivacaine. Clinical trial number: UMIN000013347 for the randomized study and UMIN000041518 for the prospective cohort study, which were registered at University hospital Medical Information Network Center.
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spelling pubmed-102354682023-06-03 Thoracic epidural analgesia prolongs postoperative QT interval on electrocardiogram in major non-cardiac surgery: a randomized comparison and a prospective cohort analysis Hori, Kotaro Tsujikawa, Shogo Egami, Mika Waki, Sayaka Watanabe, Ryota Hino, Hideki Matsuura, Tadashi Mori, Takashi Front Pharmacol Pharmacology Introduction: Prolongation of QT interval on electrocardiogram can be associated with perioperative lethal arrhythmia. Epidural analgesia is a commonly used modality to relieve surgical pain by blocking sensory nerves, which also blocks the autonomic nervous system and can affect QT interval. Since patient monitoring becomes much less frequent after surgery than intraoperative period, we investigated the effects of epidural analgesia on postoperative QT interval with a randomized clinical trial and a prospective cohort study. Methods: In a randomized study, we assigned 60 patients undergoing thoracic epidural analgesia to an epidural analgesia or no-epidural analgesia group, in which 3 ml/h of 0.25% epidural levobupivacaine (7.5 mg/h) was administered only in the epidural analgesia group during surgery. The primary outcome was the postoperative heart rate-corrected QT interval. In a prospective cohort study, patients were assigned to receive 5 ml/h epidural levobupivacaine (12.5 mg/h). The plasma concentration of levobupivacaine was measured using liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry. Results: The median postoperative corrected QT interval interval with 3 ml/h epidural levobupivacaine was significantly longer than that without epidural analgesia. Using multiple regression analysis for the factors known to affect postoperative corrected QT interval interval, epidural analgesia was found to be an independent variable for prolongation, and the mean difference of the corrected QT interval interval with or without epidural analgesia was 23 ms after adjustment. The median plasma concentration of levobupivacaine at the end of surgery was 164 ng/ml with 3 ml/h epidural levobupivacaine, and the correlation coefficient to the postoperative corrected QT interval interval was 0.14, showing a not significant correlation. A prospective cohort study showed that 5 ml/h epidural levobupivacaine significantly prolonged postoperative corrected QT interval interval compared to preoperative baseline. The median plasma concentration of levobupivacaine was 166 ng/ml with 5 ml/h, the correlation coefficient of which showed no significant correlation. Conclusion: Thoracic epidural analgesia could enhance postoperative corrected QT interval prolongation after general anesthesia. The mechanism is possibly caused by blocking neighboring or part of the cardiac sympathetic nerves, rather than by systemic effects of epidurally administered levobupivacaine. Clinical trial number: UMIN000013347 for the randomized study and UMIN000041518 for the prospective cohort study, which were registered at University hospital Medical Information Network Center. Frontiers Media S.A. 2023-05-19 /pmc/articles/PMC10235468/ /pubmed/37274100 http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fphar.2023.936242 Text en Copyright © 2023 Hori, Tsujikawa, Egami, Waki, Watanabe, Hino, Matsuura and Mori. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) and the copyright owner(s) are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.
spellingShingle Pharmacology
Hori, Kotaro
Tsujikawa, Shogo
Egami, Mika
Waki, Sayaka
Watanabe, Ryota
Hino, Hideki
Matsuura, Tadashi
Mori, Takashi
Thoracic epidural analgesia prolongs postoperative QT interval on electrocardiogram in major non-cardiac surgery: a randomized comparison and a prospective cohort analysis
title Thoracic epidural analgesia prolongs postoperative QT interval on electrocardiogram in major non-cardiac surgery: a randomized comparison and a prospective cohort analysis
title_full Thoracic epidural analgesia prolongs postoperative QT interval on electrocardiogram in major non-cardiac surgery: a randomized comparison and a prospective cohort analysis
title_fullStr Thoracic epidural analgesia prolongs postoperative QT interval on electrocardiogram in major non-cardiac surgery: a randomized comparison and a prospective cohort analysis
title_full_unstemmed Thoracic epidural analgesia prolongs postoperative QT interval on electrocardiogram in major non-cardiac surgery: a randomized comparison and a prospective cohort analysis
title_short Thoracic epidural analgesia prolongs postoperative QT interval on electrocardiogram in major non-cardiac surgery: a randomized comparison and a prospective cohort analysis
title_sort thoracic epidural analgesia prolongs postoperative qt interval on electrocardiogram in major non-cardiac surgery: a randomized comparison and a prospective cohort analysis
topic Pharmacology
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10235468/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37274100
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fphar.2023.936242
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