(Press-News.org) The ability of the commonly used stimulant methylphenidate (Ritalin) to speed recovery from general anesthesia appears to apply both to the inhaled gas isoflurane, as previously reported, and to the intravenous drug propofol. Members of the same Massachusetts General Hospital (MGH) research team that reported the isoflurane study are publishing similar results for propofol in the May issue of Anesthesiology, and their paper has been issued online.
"Propofol is the most widely used intravenous general anesthetic, and there is currently no way to reverse its effects," says Ken Solt, MD, of the MGH Department of Anesthesia, Critical Care and Pain Medicine, the paper's corresponding author. "By finding that methylphenidate can reverse general anesthesia with propofol as well as with isoflurane, we show that it may be broadly applicable for waking patients up from different general anesthetic drugs."
The MGH team's previous study in the October 2011 issue of Anesthesiology showed that methylphenidate – known to affect arousal pathways in the brain and commonly used to treat attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder – significantly decreased the amount of time it took for rats to recover from isoflurane anesthesia. The current study ran very similar experiments in which propofol, which has a different mechanism of action than isoflurane, was the anesthetic agent.
In the first experiments, animals that had lost consciousness after a single dose of propofol were given intravenous methylphenidate or saline, and those receiving methylphenidate recovered almost five minutes faster than those receiving saline. Administration of methylphenidate also induced signs of arousal – movement or standing up – in rats receiving a constant intravenous dose of propofol, while animals administered saline remained motionless. EEG readings of the brains of animals during constant infusion of a higher propofol dose showed that methylphenidate caused brain activity to shift back toward the awake state. The change persisted for up to 10 minutes, during which the animals showed signs of arousal like opening their eyes and kicking, although they did not stand up.
"Propofol can be a very dangerous drug because it can cause patients to stop breathing and their blood pressure to drop," Solt explains. "It is often used for sedation during procedures such as colonoscopies, and if patients get oversedated, methylphenidate may be useful in getting them to wake up and resume breathing and in restoring their blood pressure. In the operating room, where propofol can be administered for several hours, patients may take as long as an hour to recover. The ability to use methylphenidate to induce recovery could make general anesthesia safer and more efficient, and we're hoping to conduct a clinical trial in patients in the near future."
###
Solt is an assistant professor of Anæsthesia at Harvard Medical School. Additional authors of the Anesthesiology report are lead author Jessica Chemali, and co-authors Christa Van Dort, PhD, and Emery Brown, MD, PhD, all of the MGH Department of Anesthesia, Critical Care and Pain Medicine. The study was supported by grants from the National Institutes of Health.
Massachusetts General Hospital (www.massgeneral.org) founded in 1811, is the original and largest teaching hospital of Harvard Medical School. The MGH conducts the largest hospital-based research program in the United States, with an annual research budget of more than $750 million and major research centers in AIDS, cardiovascular research, cancer, computational and integrative biology, cutaneous biology, human genetics, medical imaging, neurodegenerative disorders, regenerative medicine, systems biology, transplantation biology and photomedicine.
Recovery from propofol anesthesia may be sped by use of common stimulant
Methylphenidate may help induce recovery from several anesthetic drugs, improve patient safety
2012-04-10
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
Notre Dame researchers using novel method to combat malaria drug resistance
2012-04-10
Researchers from the University of Notre Dame's Eck Institute for Global Health developed a "gene chip" to contribute to the identification of malaria drug resistance, an effort that will allow for real-time response in modified treatment strategies for this devastating disease.
The new discovery is described in a paper appearing in the latest early online edition of the journal Science. The team of researchers includes Notre Dame's Michael Ferdig, associate professor of biological sciences and doctoral student Becky Miller along with John Tan, managing director of the ...
History of abandoned urban sites found stored in soil
2012-04-10
April 5, 2012 - Old houses and vacant lots may not look like much to the naked eye, but to some, the site is better than gold. Excavations over the years can create a challenge to study what's left behind and often appears as if dirt and debris ended up mixed in a blender then pressed by a giant trash compactor.
However, in Detroit, one scientist and geologist is finding some of the city's abandoned lots provide a surprising "natural laboratory" for studying certain processes involved in soil formation; particularly the weathering of rocky and mineral objects within ...
New research reveals food ingredients most prone to fraudulent economically motivated adulteration
2012-04-10
Rockville, Md., April 5, 2012 — In new research published in the April Journal of Food Science, analyses of the first known public database compiling reports on food fraud and economically motivated adulteration in food highlight the most fraud-prone ingredients in the food supply; analytical detection methods; and the type of fraud reported. Based on a review of records from scholarly journals, the top seven adulterated ingredients in the database are olive oil, milk, honey, saffron, orange juice, coffee, and apple juice.
The database was created by the U.S. Pharmacopeial ...
Copper chains: Study reveals Earth's deep-seated hold on copper
2012-04-10
Earth is clingy when it comes to copper. A new Rice University study this week in the journal Science finds that nature conspires at scales both large and small -- from the realms of tectonic plates down to molecular bonds -- to keep most of Earth's copper buried dozens of miles below ground.
"Everything throughout history shows us that Earth does not want to give up its copper to the continental crust," said Rice geochemist Cin-Ty Lee, the lead author of the study. "Both the building blocks for continents and the continental crust itself, dating back as much as 3 billion ...
Big advance against cystic fibrosis
2012-04-10
Harvard stem cell researchers at Massachusetts General Hospital (MGH) have taken a critical step in making possible the discovery in the relatively near future of a drug to control cystic fibrosis (CF), a fatal lung disease that claims about 500 lives each year, with 1,000 new cases diagnosed annually.
Beginning with the skin cells of patients with CF, Jayaraj Rajagopal, MD, and colleagues first created induced pluripotent stem (iPS) cells, and then used those cells to create human disease-specific functioning lung epithelium, the tissue that lines the airways and is ...
Scientists discover new threat to birds posed by invasive pythons
2012-04-10
Smithsonian scientists and their colleagues have uncovered a new threat posed by invasive Burmese pythons in Florida and the Everglades: The snakes are not only eating the area's birds, but also the birds' eggs straight from the nest. The results of this research add a new challenge to the area's already heavily taxed native wildlife. The team's findings are published in the online journal Reptiles & Amphibians: Conservation and Natural History.
Burmese pythons, native to southern Asia, have taken up a comfortable residence in the state of Florida, especially in the Everglades. ...
Study reveals impact of socioeconomic factors on the racial gap in life expectancy
2012-04-10
Differences in factors such as income, education and marital status could contribute overwhelmingly to the gap in life expectancy between blacks and whites in the United States, according to one of the first studies to put a number on how much of the divide can be attributed to disparities in socioeconomic characteristics.
A Princeton University study recently published in the journal Demography reveals that socioeconomic differences can account for 80 percent of the life-expectancy divide between black and white men, and for 70 percent of the imbalance between black ...
Researchers discover unique suspension technique for large-scale stem cell production
2012-04-10
Post-doctoral researcher David Fluri and Professor Peter Zandstra at the University of Toronto's Institute of Biomaterials and Biomedical Engineering (IBBME) have developed a unique new technique for growing stem cells that may make possible cost-effective, large-scale stem cell manufacturing and research.
Although stem cells are widely used for the testing of new drugs, researchers have always faced difficulties manufacturing enough viable cells from a culture. Typically, stem cells are grown on surfaces that must be scraped, and which must then be differentiated from ...
NASA's TRMM Satellite sees tornadic Texas storms in 3-D
2012-04-10
NASA's Tropical Rainfall Measuring Mission (TRMM) satellite provides a look at thunderstorms in three dimensions and shows scientists the heights of the thunderclouds and the rainfall rates coming from them, both of which indicate severity.
Powerful thunderstorms that created severe weather were more than 8 miles high.
NOAA's National Weather Service Storm Prediction Center received 18 reports of tornadoes occurring on April 3 over northeastern Texas. Some of these very destructive storms dropped softball sized hail as they passed to the south of the Dallas/Fort ...
Women cannot rewind the 'biological clock'
2012-04-10
Many women do not fully appreciate the consequences of delaying motherhood, and expect that assisted reproductive technologies can reverse their aged ovarian function, Yale researchers reported in a study published in a recent issue of Fertility and Sterility.
"There is an alarming misconception about fertility among women," said Pasquale Patrizio, M.D., professor in the Department of Obstetrics & Gynecology at Yale School of Medicine and director of the Yale Fertility Center. "We also found a lack of knowledge about steps women can take early in their reproductive ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
The internet names a new deep-sea species, Senckenberg researchers select a scientific name from over 8,000 suggestions.
UT San Antonio-led research team discovers compound in 500-million-year-old fossils, shedding new light on Earth’s carbon cycle
Maternal perinatal depression may increase the risk of autistic-related traits in girls
Study: Blocking a key protein may create novel form of stress in cancer cells and re-sensitize chemo-resistant tumors
HRT via skin is best treatment for low bone density in women whose periods have stopped due to anorexia or exercise, says study
Insilico Medicine showcases at WHX 2026: Connecting the Middle East with global partners to accelerate translational research
From rice fields to fresh air: Transforming agricultural waste into a shield against indoor pollution
University of Houston study offers potential new targets to identify, remediate dyslexia
Scientists uncover hidden role of microalgae in spreading antibiotic resistance in waterways
Turning orange waste into powerful water-cleaning material
Papadelis to lead new pediatric brain research center
Power of tiny molecular 'flycatcher' surprises through disorder
Before crisis strikes — smartwatch tracks triggers for opioid misuse
Statins do not cause the majority of side effects listed in package leaflets
UC Riverside doctoral student awarded prestigious DOE fellowship
UMD team finds E. coli, other pathogens in Potomac River after sewage spill
New vaccine platform promotes rare protective B cells
Apes share human ability to imagine
Major step toward a quantum-secure internet demonstrated over city-scale distance
Increasing toxicity trends impede progress in global pesticide reduction commitments
Methane jump wasn’t just emissions — the atmosphere (temporarily) stopped breaking it down
Flexible governance for biological data is needed to reduce AI’s biosecurity risks
Increasing pesticide toxicity threatens UN goal of global biodiversity protection by 2030
How “invisible” vaccine scaffolding boosts HIV immune response
Study reveals the extent of rare earthquakes in deep layer below Earth’s crust
Boston College scientists help explain why methane spiked in the early 2020s
Penn Nursing study identifies key predictors for chronic opioid use following surgery
KTU researcher’s study: Why Nobel Prize-level materials have yet to reach industry
Research spotlight: Interplay of hormonal contraceptive use, stress and cardiovascular risk in women
Pennington Biomedical’s Dr. Catherine Prater awarded postdoctoral fellowship from the American Heart Association
[Press-News.org] Recovery from propofol anesthesia may be sped by use of common stimulantMethylphenidate may help induce recovery from several anesthetic drugs, improve patient safety


