Succinylcholine


Case Synopsis

A 52-year-old woman with bipolar depression undergoes her first electroconvulsive therapy (ECT) treatment. Past history is otherwise pertinent only for hemiparetic, static encephalopathy as a result of meningitis in infancy and hypertension. Medications include lamotrigine, lurasidone, and lisinopril. Induction of anesthesia with 80 mg methohexital and 60 mg succinylcholine is uneventful, and she receives unilateral ECT. She is still apneic 15 minutes after the procedure and has no train-of-four response. She is sedated, intubated, and placed on mechanical ventilation. Sixty minutes later, she is clinically weak, with four diminished twitches and moderate fade on a train-of-four. Her trachea is extubated 2 hours after completion of ECT. Evaluation reveals a butyrylcholinesterase activity of 55% and a dibucaine number of 25, which is consistent with an atypical variant of butyrylcholinesterase.

Problem Analysis

Definition

For 50 years, the rapid onset and short duration of succinylcholine has afforded distinct advantages over other neuromuscular blocking drugs. Unfortunately succinylcholine also has numerous well-described complications that are related to its mechanism of action or pharmacokinetics or that occur as an idiosyncratic effect ( Box 98.1 ). The most serious reactions are hyperkalemia, unanticipated prolonged muscle relaxation, and malignant hyperthermia (see Chapter 195 ). Hyperkalemia-induced cardiac arrest may develop soon after succinylcholine administration to patients with conditions that predispose to acetylcholine receptor upregulation ( Box 98.2 ) or rhabdomyolysis.

BOX 98.1
Complications of Succinylcholine Administration

  • Cardiovascular

    • Tachycardia (ganglionic stimulation)

    • Bradycardia, sinus arrest, junctional rhythm (cardiac muscarinic)

  • Hyperkalemia, exaggerated potassium release

  • Fasciculations; myalgia a

    a May be reduced with succinylcholine pretreatment (defasciculation).

  • Myoglobinuria, elevated plasma creatine phosphokinase

  • Sustained muscle contraction (myotonic dystrophy, congenital myotonia)

  • Malignant hyperthermia

  • Masseter muscle rigidity

  • Prolonged relaxation

    • Phase II block

    • Inadequate pseudocholinesterase activity

  • Increased intraocular pressure

  • Increased intracranial pressure

  • Increased intragastric pressure a

  • Histamine release

  • Allergy/anaphylactoid reactions

BOX 98.2
Conditions Predisposing to Exaggerated Potassium Release With Succinylcholine

  • Thermal injury

  • Upper or lower motor neuron defect

    • Spinal cord trauma

    • Hemiparesis, lower motor neuron lesions

    • Multiple sclerosis

    • Stroke

    • Guillain-Barré disease

    • Encephalitis with motor involvement

    • Central nervous system trauma

  • Myopathy, muscular dystrophy

  • Major trauma

  • Disuse atrophy, prolonged chemical denervation

  • Severe infection, tetanus

Prolonged relaxation may occur after succinylcholine administration with the development of a phase II block or with decreased metabolism. After a single large dose, repeated doses, or a prolonged continuous infusion of succinylcholine, the postjunctional receptor may not respond normally to acetylcholine, even after the receptor-nicotinic channel has repolarized. This is termed a phase II block .

Under normal circumstances, the short duration of the effect of succinylcholine is the result of rapid hydrolysis by butyrylcholinesterase (BChE), also known as pseudocholinesterase or plasma cholinesterase. Ninety percent of an intravenous dose of succinylcholine is rapidly hydrolyzed to a nearly inactive metabolite in the plasma and liver by BChE. Neuromuscular block terminates by the diffusion of succinylcholine from the end plate into the extracellular fluid, where BChE influences the onset and duration of action by controlling the rate of hydrolysis. A prolonged duration of succinylcholine may occur when quantities of normal BChE are significantly decreased or when an abnormal variant of BChE is present.

Recognition

T-wave elevation, QRS complex prolongation and a sinusoidal QRS waveform (see Chapter 87 ), and asystole or ventricular fibrillation occurring shortly after succinylcholine administration are the characteristic alterations observed on the electrocardiogram (ECG) in patients with exaggerated potassium (K + ) release and hyperkalemia. Measurement of serum K + concentrations confirms hyperkalemia. However, if the ECG is abnormal, treatment should precede confirmation of serum K + concentrations.

The presence of abnormal BChE is frequently recognized only after failure to emerge from general anesthesia and prolonged muscle weakness occurs in an otherwise healthy patient who received a normal dose of succinylcholine. The presence of very low levels of a normal BChE or abnormal forms of BChE leads to variable prolongation of neuromuscular block ( Table 98.1 ). These abnormalities are not uncommon. In a recent observational study in Switzerland, 16% of patients having rapid-sequence induction with 1 mg/kg succinylcholine had duration of block greater than 10 minutes. The diagnosis is confirmed by characteristic findings on peripheral nerve stimulation, including a train-of-four ratio (T 4 /T 1 ) of less than 0.3 and the presence of fade and posttetanic facilitation typical of a phase II block caused by the elevated concentration of unmetabolized succinylcholine at the neuromuscular junction.

TABLE 98.1
Characteristics of Normal, Atypical, and Abnormal Butyrylcholinesterase
Data from Pantuck EJ, Pantuck CB: Prolonged apnea following succinylcholine administration. In Azar I, editor: Muscle relaxants. New York, Marcel Dekker, 1987, pp 206-229; Whittaker M: Plasma cholinesterase variants and the anaesthetist. Anaesthesia 35(2):174-197, 1980; Bretlau C, Sørenson MK, Vedersoe AL, et al.: Response to succinylcholine in patients carrying the K-variant of the butyrylcholinesterase gene. Anesth Analg 116(3):596-601, 2013.
Genotype Phenotype (Common Name) Block Prolongation (90% T 1 , min) Dibucaine Number Fluoride Number Enzymatic Activity Frequency
Eu Eu Wild type
(usual)
Normal
9.3 min (4–16)
70–80 60 100% 96%
Kalow (k) polymorphism (K-variant) Minimal
11.6 min (7–14)
80 60 67% Eu/K: 1/4
KK: 1/63
Eu Ea Slight
15 min (9–38)
60 50 77% 1/25
Eu Ef Slight
15 min (11–23)
75 50 86% 1/200
Eu Es Slight 80 60 50% 1/190
Ea Ef Moderate
29 (23–36)
50 50 59% 1/20,000
Ef Es Moderate 65 35 37% 1/15,000
Ef Ef Fluoride resistant
F1, F2
Moderate 65 35 74% 0.002
1/154,000
Ea Ea Dibucaine resistant (atypical) Very
130 (90–180)
20 20 43% 0.018
1/2000
Es Es Silent
S1, S2, S3
Very 0-slight 1/100,000
Ea Es Very 20 20 22% 1/29,000

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