Ventilation and chemoreflexes during enflurane sedation and anaesthesia in man

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Abstract

Enflurane sedation and anaesthesia in healthy fit subjects reduced ventilation and the response to carbon dioxide, hypoxaemia and a low dose of doxapram, all in a dose-related fashion. Comparing the three chemoreflexes tested, the response to hypoxaemia and doxapram were the more profoundly impaired; they were nearly totally abolished by anaesthesia. These effects of enflurane on chemoreflex activities are qualitatively similar to those previously observed with halothane. © 1979 Canadian Anesthesiologists.

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Knill, R. L., Manninen, P. H., & Clement, J. L. (1979). Ventilation and chemoreflexes during enflurane sedation and anaesthesia in man. Canadian Anaesthetists’ Society Journal, 26(5), 353–360. https://doi.org/10.1007/BF03006447

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