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Department of Biological Sciences, Stanford University, Stanford, California 94305
Received 12 April 1996; accepted in final form 6 August 1996.
Grahn, D. A., M. C. Heller, J. E. Larkin, and H. C. Heller.
Appropriate thermal manipulations eliminate tremors in rats
recovering from halothane anesthesia. J. Appl.
Physiol. 81(6): 2547-2554, 1996.
Tremors are
common in mammals emerging from anesthesia. To determine whether
appropriate thermal manipulations immediately before emergence from
anesthesia are sufficient to eliminate these tremors,
electroencephalographic (EEG) and electromyographic (EMG) activities,
hypothalamic temperature (Thy),
and O2 consumption were monitored
in 12 rats recovering from halothane anesthesia under three thermal
regimes. EEG and EMG activities were recorded throughout anesthesia and
served as feedback signals for controlling anesthetic depth. During
anesthesia, Thy was either
1) allowed to fall to
32-34°C, 2) maintained at
37-39°C, or 3) allowed to fall to 32-34°C and then raised to 37-39°C. When
hypothermic on emergence from anesthesia, all of the animals exhibited
postanesthetic tremors that persisted until
Thy values returned to
normothermia. None of the animals expressed postanesthetic tremors when
normothermic on emergence from anesthesia. In addition, the time
between emergence from anesthesia (as determined by EEG/EMG parameters)
and the initiation of coordinated motor activities was significantly
decreased in the normothermic animals.
thermoregulation; anesthetic effect; electroencephalographic activity; electromyographic activity; recovery time
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