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Local Anesthetic-Induced Neurotoxicity

This review summarizes current knowledge concerning incidence, risk factors, and mechanisms of perioperative nerve injury, with focus on local anesthetic-induced neurotoxicity. Perioperative nerve injury is a complex phenomenon and can be caused by a number of clinical factors. Anesthetic risk facto...

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Autores principales: Verlinde, Mark, Hollmann, Markus W., Stevens, Markus F., Hermanns, Henning, Werdehausen, Robert, Lirk, Philipp
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2016
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4813201/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26959012
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijms17030339
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author Verlinde, Mark
Hollmann, Markus W.
Stevens, Markus F.
Hermanns, Henning
Werdehausen, Robert
Lirk, Philipp
author_facet Verlinde, Mark
Hollmann, Markus W.
Stevens, Markus F.
Hermanns, Henning
Werdehausen, Robert
Lirk, Philipp
author_sort Verlinde, Mark
collection PubMed
description This review summarizes current knowledge concerning incidence, risk factors, and mechanisms of perioperative nerve injury, with focus on local anesthetic-induced neurotoxicity. Perioperative nerve injury is a complex phenomenon and can be caused by a number of clinical factors. Anesthetic risk factors for perioperative nerve injury include regional block technique, patient risk factors, and local anesthetic-induced neurotoxicity. Surgery can lead to nerve damage by use of tourniquets or by direct mechanical stress on nerves, such as traction, transection, compression, contusion, ischemia, and stretching. Current literature suggests that the majority of perioperative nerve injuries are unrelated to regional anesthesia. Besides the blockade of sodium channels which is responsible for the anesthetic effect, systemic local anesthetics can have a positive influence on the inflammatory response and the hemostatic system in the perioperative period. However, next to these beneficial effects, local anesthetics exhibit time and dose-dependent toxicity to a variety of tissues, including nerves. There is equivocal experimental evidence that the toxicity varies among local anesthetics. Even though the precise order of events during local anesthetic-induced neurotoxicity is not clear, possible cellular mechanisms have been identified. These include the intrinsic caspase-pathway, PI3K-pathway, and MAPK-pathways. Further research will need to determine whether these pathways are non-specifically activated by local anesthetics, or whether there is a single common precipitating factor.
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spelling pubmed-48132012016-04-06 Local Anesthetic-Induced Neurotoxicity Verlinde, Mark Hollmann, Markus W. Stevens, Markus F. Hermanns, Henning Werdehausen, Robert Lirk, Philipp Int J Mol Sci Review This review summarizes current knowledge concerning incidence, risk factors, and mechanisms of perioperative nerve injury, with focus on local anesthetic-induced neurotoxicity. Perioperative nerve injury is a complex phenomenon and can be caused by a number of clinical factors. Anesthetic risk factors for perioperative nerve injury include regional block technique, patient risk factors, and local anesthetic-induced neurotoxicity. Surgery can lead to nerve damage by use of tourniquets or by direct mechanical stress on nerves, such as traction, transection, compression, contusion, ischemia, and stretching. Current literature suggests that the majority of perioperative nerve injuries are unrelated to regional anesthesia. Besides the blockade of sodium channels which is responsible for the anesthetic effect, systemic local anesthetics can have a positive influence on the inflammatory response and the hemostatic system in the perioperative period. However, next to these beneficial effects, local anesthetics exhibit time and dose-dependent toxicity to a variety of tissues, including nerves. There is equivocal experimental evidence that the toxicity varies among local anesthetics. Even though the precise order of events during local anesthetic-induced neurotoxicity is not clear, possible cellular mechanisms have been identified. These include the intrinsic caspase-pathway, PI3K-pathway, and MAPK-pathways. Further research will need to determine whether these pathways are non-specifically activated by local anesthetics, or whether there is a single common precipitating factor. MDPI 2016-03-04 /pmc/articles/PMC4813201/ /pubmed/26959012 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijms17030339 Text en © 2016 by the authors; licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons by Attribution (CC-BY) license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Review
Verlinde, Mark
Hollmann, Markus W.
Stevens, Markus F.
Hermanns, Henning
Werdehausen, Robert
Lirk, Philipp
Local Anesthetic-Induced Neurotoxicity
title Local Anesthetic-Induced Neurotoxicity
title_full Local Anesthetic-Induced Neurotoxicity
title_fullStr Local Anesthetic-Induced Neurotoxicity
title_full_unstemmed Local Anesthetic-Induced Neurotoxicity
title_short Local Anesthetic-Induced Neurotoxicity
title_sort local anesthetic-induced neurotoxicity
topic Review
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4813201/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26959012
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijms17030339
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