Marcaine Spinal
Generic Name: bupivacaine hydrochloride and dextrose
Dosage Form: Injection, usp
bupivacaine hydrochloride in dextrose
injection, USP
STERILE
HYPERBARIC SOLUTION
FOR
SPINAL ANESTHESIA
Rx Only
Marcaine Spinal Description
Bupivacaine hydrochloride is 2-Piperidinecarboxamide, 1-butyl-N-(2,6-dimethylphenyl)-, monohydrochloride,
monohydrate, a white crystalline powder that is freely soluble in 95 percent
ethanol, soluble in water, and slightly soluble in chloroform or acetone.
It has the following structural formula:

Dextrose is D-glucopyranose monohydrate and has the following structural formula:

MARCAINE® Spinal is available in sterile hyperbaric solution for subarachnoid
injection (spinal block).
Bupivacaine hydrochloride
is related chemically and pharmacologically to the aminoacyl local anesthetics.
It is a homologue of mepivacaine and is chemically related to lidocaine. All
three of these anesthetics contain an amide linkage between the aromatic nucleus
and the amino or piperidine group. They differ in this respect from the procaine-type
local anesthetics, which have an ester linkage.
Each
mL of Marcaine Spinal contains 7.5 mg bupivacaine hydrochloride (anhydrous)
and 82.5 mg dextrose (anhydrous). The pH of this solution is adjusted to between
4.0 and 6.5 with sodium hydroxide or hydrochloric acid.
The specific gravity of Marcaine Spinal is between 1.030 and 1.035 at 25°C
and 1.03 at 37°C.
Marcaine Spinal does not contain
any preservatives.
Marcaine Spinal - Clinical Pharmacology
Local anesthetics block the generation and the conduction
of nerve impulses, presumably by increasing the threshold for electrical excitation
in the nerve, by slowing the propagation of the nerve impulse, and by reducing
the rate of rise of the action potential. In general, the progression of anesthesia
is related to the diameter, myelination, and conduction velocity of affected
nerve fibers. Clinically, the order of loss of nerve function is as follows:
(1) pain, (2) temperature, (3) touch, (4) proprioception, and (5) skeletal
muscle tone.
Systemic absorption of local anesthetics
produces effects on the cardiovascular and central nervous systems (CNS).
At blood concentrations achieved with normal therapeutic doses, changes in
cardiac conduction, excitability, refractoriness, contractility, and peripheral
vascular resistance are minimal. However, toxic blood concentrations depress
cardiac conduction and excitability, which may lead to atrioventricular block,
ventricular arrhythmias, and cardiac arrest, sometimes resulting in fatalities.
In addition, myocardial contractility is depressed and peripheral vasodilation
occurs, leading to decreased cardiac output and arterial blood pressure. Recent
clinical reports and animal research suggest that these cardiovascular changes
are more likely to occur after unintended direct intravascular injection of
bupivacaine. Therefore, when epidural anesthesia with bupivacaine is considered,
incremental dosing is necessary.
Following systemic
absorption, local anesthetics can produce central nervous system stimulation,
depression, or both. Apparent central stimulation is manifested as restlessness,
tremors and shivering, progressing to convulsions, followed by depression
and coma progressing ultimately to respiratory arrest. However, the local
anesthetics have a primary depressant effect on the medulla and on higher
centers. The depressed stage may occur without a prior excited stage.
Pharmacokinetics: The rate of systemic
absorption of local anesthetics is dependent upon the total dose and concentration
of drug administered, the route of administration, the vascularity of the
administration site, and the presence or absence of epinephrine in the anesthetic
solution. A dilute concentration of epinephrine (1:200,000 or 5 mcg/mL) usually
reduces the rate of absorption and peak plasma concentration of MARCAINE,
permitting the use of moderately larger total doses and sometimes prolonging
the duration of action.
The onset of action with MARCAINE
is rapid and anesthesia is long lasting. The duration of anesthesia is significantly
longer with MARCAINE than with any other commonly used local anesthetic. It
has also been noted that there is a period of analgesia that persists after
the return of sensation, during which time the need for strong analgesics
is reduced.
The onset of sensory blockade following
spinal block with Marcaine Spinal is very rapid (within one minute); maximum
motor blockade and maximum dermatome level are achieved within 15 minutes
in most cases. Duration of sensory blockade (time to return of complete sensation
in the operative site or regression of two dermatomes) following a 12 mg dose
averages 2 hours with or without 0.2 mg epinephrine. The time to return
of complete motor ability with 12 mg Marcaine Spinal averages 3 1/2 hours
without the addition of epinephrine and 4½ hours if 0.2 mg epinephrine
is added. When compared to equal milligram doses of hyperbaric tetracaine,
the duration of sensory blockade was the same but the time to complete motor
recovery was significantly longer for tetracaine. Addition of 0.2 mg epinephrine
significantly prolongs the motor blockade and time to first postoperative
narcotic with MARCAINE Spinal.
Local anesthetics appear
to cross the placenta by passive diffusion. The rate and degree of diffusionis governed by (1) the degree of plasma protein binding, (2) the degree of
ionization, and (3) the degree of lipid solubility. Fetal/maternal ratios
of local anesthetics appear to be inversely related to the degree of plasma
protein binding, because only the free, unbound drug is available for placental
transfer. MARCAINE with a high protein binding capacity (95%) has a low fetal/maternal
ratio (0.2 to 0.4). The extent of placental transfer is also determined by
the degree of ionization and lipid solubility of the drug. Lipid soluble,
nonionized drugs readily enter the fetal blood from the maternal circulation.
Depending upon the route of administration, local anesthetics are distributed
to some extent to all body tissues, with high concentrations found in highly
perfused organs such as the liver, lungs, heart, and brain.
Pharmacokinetic studies on the plasma profiles of MARCAINE after direct intravenous
injection suggest a three-compartment open model. The first compartment is
represented by the rapid intravascular distribution of the drug. The second
compartment represents the equilibration of the drug throughout the highly
perfused organs such as the brain, myocardium, lungs, kidneys, and liver.
The third compartment represents an equilibration of the drug with poorly
perfused tissues, such as muscle and fat. The elimination of drug from tissue
distribution depends largely upon the ability of binding sites in the circulation
to carry it to the liver where it is metabolized.
Various pharmacokinetic parameters of the local anesthetics can be significantly
altered by the presence of hepatic or renal disease, addition of epinephrine,
factors affecting urinary pH, renal blood flow, the route of drug administration,
and the age of the patient. The half-life of MARCAINE in adults is 2.7 hours
and in neonates 8.1 hours. In clinical studies, elderly patients exhibited
a greater spread and higher maximal level of analgesia than younger patients.
Elderly patients also reached the maximal level of analgesia more rapidly
than younger patients, and exhibited a faster onset of motor blockade. The
total plasma clearance was decreased and the terminal half-life was lengthened
in these patients.
Amide-type local anesthetics such
as MARCAINE are metabolized primarily in the liver via conjugation with glucuronic
acid. Patients with hepatic disease, especially those with severe hepatic
disease, may be more susceptible to the potential toxicities of the amide-type
local anesthetics. Pipecolylxylidine is the major metabolite of MARCAINE.
The kidney is the main excretory organ for most local anesthetics and their
metabolites. Urinary excretion is affected by urinary perfusion and factors
affecting urinary pH. Only 6% of bupivacaine is excreted unchanged in the
urine.
When administered in recommended doses and
concentrations, MARCAINE does not ordinarily produce irritation or tissue
damage and does not cause methemoglobinemia.
Indications and Usage for Marcaine Spinal
Marcaine Spinal is indicated for the production of subarachnoid
block (spinal anesthesia).
Standard textbooks should
be consulted to determine the accepted procedures and techniques for the administration
of spinal anesthesia.
Contraindications
Marcaine Spinal is contraindicated in patients with a known
hypersensitivity to it or to any local anesthetic agent of the amide-type.
The following conditions preclude the use of spinal anesthesia:
Severe hemorrhage, severe hypotension or shock and arrhythmias,
such as complete heart block, which severely restrict cardiac output.
Local infection at the site of proposed lumbar puncture.
Septicemia.
Warnings
LOCAL ANESTHETICS SHOULD ONLY BE EMPLOYED BY CLINICIANS WHO
ARE WELL VERSED IN DIAGNOSIS AND MANAGEMENT OF DOSE-RELATED TOXICITY AND OTHER
ACUTE EMERGENCIES WHICH MIGHT ARISE FROM THE BLOCK TO BE EMPLOYED,
AND THEN ONLY AFTER INSURING THE IMMEDIATE AVAILABILITY
OF OXYGEN, OTHER RESUSCITATIVE DRUGS, CARDIOPULMONARY RESUSCITATIVE EQUIPMENT,
AND THE PERSONNEL RESOURCES NEEDED FOR PROPER MANAGEMENT OF TOXIC REACTIONS
AND RELATED EMERGENCIES. (See also ADVERSE REACTIONS and PRECAUTIONS.) DELAY
IN PROPER MANAGEMENT OF DOSE-RELATED TOXICITY, UNDERVENTILATION FROM ANY CAUSE
AND/OR ALTERED SENSITIVITY MAY LEAD TO THE DEVELOPMENT OF ACIDOSIS, CARDIAC
ARREST, AND, POSSIBLY, DEATH.
Spinal anesthetics should
not be injected during uterine contractions, because spinal fluid current
may carry the drug further cephalad than desired.
A free flow of cerebrospinal fluid during the performance of spinal anesthesia
is indicative of entry into the subarachnoid space. However, aspiration should
be performed before the anesthetic solution is injected to confirm entry into
the subarachnoid space and to avoid intravascular injection.
MARCAINE solutions containing epinephrine or other vasopressors should not
be used con-comitantly with ergot-type oxytocic drugs, because a severe persistent
hypertension may occur. Likewise, solutions of MARCAINE containing a vasoconstrictor,
such as epinephrine, should be used with extreme caution in patients receiving
monoamine oxidase inhibitors (MAOI) or antidepressants of the triptyline or
imipramine types, because severe prolonged hypertension may result.
Until further experience is gained in patients younger than 18 years, administration
of MARCAINE in this age group is not recommended.
Mixing or the prior or intercurrent use of any other local anesthetic with
MARCAINE cannot be recommended because of insufficient data on the clinical
use of such mixtures.
Precautions
General:
The safety and effectiveness of spinal anesthetics depend
on proper dosage, correct technique, adequate precautions, and readiness for
emergencies. Resuscitative equipment, oxygen, and other resuscitative drugs
should be available for immediate use. (See WARNINGS and ADVERSE REACTIONS.)
The patient should have IV fluids running via an indwelling catheter to assure
a functioning intravenous pathway. The lowest dosage of local anesthetic that
results in effective anesthesia should be used. Aspiration for blood should
be performed before injection and injection should be made slowly. Tolerance
varies with the status of the patient. Elderly patients and acutely ill patients
may require reduced doses. Reduced doses may also be indicated in patients
with increased intra-abdominal pressure (including obstetrical patients),
if otherwise suitable for spinal anesthesia.
There
should be careful and constant monitoring of cardiovascular and respiratory
(adequacy of ventilation) vital signs and the patient’s state of consciousness
after local anesthetic injection. Restlessness, anxiety, incoherent speech,
lightheadedness, numbness and tingling of the mouth and lips, metallic taste,
tinnitus, dizziness, blurred vision, tremors, depression, or drowsiness may
be early warning signs of central nervous system toxicity.
Spinal anesthetics should be used with caution in patients with severe disturbances
of cardiac rhythm, shock, or heart block.
Sympathetic
blockade occurring during spinal anesthesia may result in peripheral vasodilation
and hypotension, the extent depending on the number of dermatomes blocked.
Patients over 65 years, particularly those with hypertension, may be
at increased risk for experiencing the hypotensive effects of MARCAINE Spinal.
Blood pressure should, therefore, be carefully monitored especially in the
early phases of anesthesia. Hypotension may be controlled by vasoconstrictors
in dosages depending on the severity of hypotension and response of treatment.
The level of anesthesia should be carefully monitored because it is not always
controllable in spinal techniques.
Because amide-type
local anesthetics such as MARCAINE are metabolized by the liver, these drugs,
especially repeat doses, should be used cautiously in patients with hepatic
disease. Patients with severe hepatic disease, because of their inability
to metabolize local anesthetics normally, are at a greater risk of developing
toxic plasma concentrations. Local anesthetics should also be used with caution
in patients with impaired cardiovascular function because they may be less
able to compensate for functional changes associated with the prolongation
of AV conduction produced by these drugs. However, dosage recommendations
for spinal anesthesia are much lower than dosage recommendations for other
major blocks and most experience regarding hepatic and cardiovascular disease
dose-related toxicity is derived from these other major blocks.
Serious dose-related cardiac arrhythmias may occur if preparations containing
a vasoconstrictor such as epinephrine are employed in patients during or following
the administration of potent inhalation agents. In deciding whether to use
these products concurrently in the same patient, the combined action of both
agents upon the myocardium, the concentration and volume of vasoconstrictor
used, and the time since injection, when applicable, should be taken into
account.
Many drugs used during the conduct of anesthesia
are considered potential triggering agents for familial malignant hyperthermia.
Because it is not known whether amide-type local anesthetics may trigger this
reaction and because the need for supplemental general anesthesia cannot be
predicted in advance, it is suggested that a standard protocol for management
should be available. Early unexplained signs of tachycardia, tachypnea, labile
blood pressure, and metabolic acidosis may precede temperature elevation.
Successful outcome is dependent on early diagnosis, prompt discontinuance
of the suspect triggering agent(s) and institution of treatment, including
oxygen therapy, indicated supportive measures, and dantrolene. (Consult dantrolene
sodium intravenous package insert before using.)
The
following conditions may preclude the use of spinal anesthesia, depending
upon the physician’s evaluation of the situation and ability to deal
with the complications or complaints which may occur:
Pre-existing diseases of the central nervous system, such
as those attributable to pernicious anemia, poliomyelitis, syphilis, or tumor.
Hematological disorders predisposing to coagulopathies or
patients on anticoagulant therapy. Trauma to a blood vessel during the conduct
of spinal anesthesia may, in some instances, result in uncontrollable central
nervous system hemorrhage or soft tissue hemorrhage.
Chronic backache and preoperative headache.
Hypotension and hypertension.
Technical problems (persistent paresthesias, persistent bloody
tap).
Arthritis or spinal deformity.
Extremes of age.
Psychosis or other causes of poor cooperation by the patient.
Information for Patients:
When appropriate, patients should be informed in advance
that they may experience temporary loss of sensation and motor activity, usually
in the lower half of the body, following proper administration of spinal anesthesia.
Also, when appropriate, the physician should discuss other information including
adverse reactions in the Marcaine Spinal package insert.
Clinically Significant Drug Interactions:
The administration of local anesthetic solutions containing
epinephrine or norepinephrine to patients receiving monoamine oxidase inhibitors
or tricyclic antidepressants may produce severe, prolonged hypertension. Concurrent
use of these agents should generally be avoided. In situations when concurrent
therapy is necessary, careful patient monitoring is essential.
Concurrent administration of vasopressor drugs and of ergot-type oxytocic
drugs may cause severe persistent hypertension or cerebrovascular accidents.
Phenothiazines and butyrophenones may reduce or reverse the pressor effect
of epinephrine.
Carcinogenesis, Mutagenesis, and Impairment of Fertility:
Long-term studies in animals of most local anesthetics including
bupivacaine to evaluate the carcinogenic potential have not been conducted.
Mutagenic potential or the effect on fertility have not been determined. There
is no evidence from human data that Marcaine Spinal may be carcinogenic or
mutagenic or that it impairs fertility.
Pregnancy Category C:
Decreased pup survival in rats and an embryocidal effect
in rabbits have been observed when bupivacaine hydrochloride was administered
to these species in doses comparable to 230 and 130 times respectively the
maximum recommended human spinal dose. There are no adequate and well-controlled
studies in pregnant women of the effect of bupivacaine on the developing fetus.
Bupivacaine hydrochloride should be used during pregnancy only if the potential
benefit justifies the potential risk to the fetus. This does not exclude the
use of Marcaine Spinal at term for obstetrical anesthesia. (See Labor
and Delivery.)
Labor and Delivery:
Spinal anesthesia has a recognized use during labor and delivery.
Bupivacaine hydrochloride, when administered properly, via the epidural route
in doses 10 to 12 times the amount used in spinal anesthesia has been used
for obstetrical analgesia and anesthesia without evidence of adverse effects
on the fetus.
Maternal hypotension has resulted from
regional anesthesia. Local anesthetics produce vasodilation by blocking sympathetic
nerves. Elevating the patient’s legs and positioning her on her left
side will help prevent decreases in blood pressure. The fetal heart rate also
should be monitored continuously and electronic fetal monitoring is highly
advisable.
It is extremely important to avoid aortocaval
compression by the gravid uterus during administrations of regional block
to parturients. To do this, the patient must be maintained in the left lateral
decubitus position or a blanket roll or sandbag may be placed beneath theright hip and the gravid uterus displaced to the left.
Spinal anesthesia may alter the forces of parturition through changes in uterine
contractility or maternal expulsive efforts. Spinal anesthesia has also been
reported to prolong the second stage of labor by removing the parturient’s
reflex urge to bear down or by interfering with motor function. The use of
obstetrical anesthesia may increase the need for forceps assistance.
The use of some local anesthetic drug products during labor and delivery may
be followed by diminished muscle strength and tone for the first day or two
of life. This has not been reported with bupivacaine.
There have been reports of cardiac arrest during use of MARCAINE 0.75% solution
for epidural anesthesia in obstetrical patients. The package insert for MARCAINE
hydrochloride for epidural, nerve block, etc., has a more complete discussion
of preparation for, and management of, this problem. These cases are compatible
with systemic toxicity following unintended intravascular injection of the
much larger doses recommended for epidural anesthesia and have not occurred within the dose range of bupivacaine
hydrochloride 0.75% recommended for spinal anesthesia in obstetrics. The 0.75%
concentration of MARCAINE is therefore not recommended for obstetrical epidural
anesthesia. Marcaine Spinal (bupivacaine hydrochloride in dextrose injection)
is recommended for spinal anesthesia in obstetrics.
Nursing Mothers:
Bupivacaine has been reported to be excreted in human milk
suggesting that the nursing infant could be theoretically exposed to a dose
of the drug. Because of the potential for serious adverse reactions in nursing
infants from bupivacaine, a decision should be made whether to discontinue
nursing or not administer bupivacaine, taking into account the importance
of the drug to the mother.
Pediatric Use:
Until further experience is gained in patients younger than
18 years, administration of Marcaine Spinal in this age group is not recommended.
Geriatric Use:
Patients over 65 years, particularly those with hypertension,
may be at increased risk for developing hypotension while undergoing spinal
anesthesia with MARCAINE Spinal. (See PRECAUTIONS, General and ADVERSE REACTIONS,
Cardiovascular System.)
Elderly patients may require
lower doses of MARCAINE Spinal. (See PRECAUTIONS, General and DOSAGE AND ADMINISTRATION.)
In clinical studies, differences in various pharmacokinetic parameters have
been observed between elderly and younger patients. (See CLINICAL PHARMACOLOGY,
Pharmacokinetics.)
This product is known to be substantially
excreted by the kidney, and the risk of toxic reactions to this drug may be
greater in patients with impaired renal function. Because elderly patients
are more likely to have decreased renal function, care should be taken in
dose selection, and it may be useful to monitor renal function. (See CLINICAL
PHARMACOLOGY, Pharmacokinetics.)
Adverse Reactions
Reactions to bupivacaine are characteristic of those associated
with other amide-type local anesthetics.
The most
commonly encountered acute adverse experiences which demand immediate countermeasures
following the administration of spinal anesthesia are hypotension due to loss
of sympathetic tone and respiratory paralysis or underventilation due to cephalad
extension of the motor level of anesthesia. These may lead to cardiac arrest
if untreated. In addition, dose-related convulsions and cardiovascular collapse
may result from diminished tolerance, rapid absorption from the injection
site, or from unintentional intravascular injection of a local anesthetic
solution. Factors influencing plasma protein binding, such as acidosis, systemic
diseases which alter protein production, or competition of other drugs for
protein binding sites, may diminish individual tolerance.
Respiratory System: Respiratory paralysis or
underventilation may be noted as a result of upward extension of the level
of spinal anesthesia and may lead to secondary hypoxic cardiac arrest if untreated.
Preanesthetic medication, intraoperative analgesics and sedatives, as well
as surgical manipulation, may contribute to underventilation. This will usually
be noted within minutes of the injection of spinal anesthetic solution, but
because of differing maximal onset times, differing intercurrent drug usage
and differing surgical manipulation, it may occur at any time during surgery
or the immediate recovery period.
Cardiovascular
System: Hypotension due to loss of sympathetic tone is a commonly
encountered extension of the clinical pharmacology of spinal anesthesia. This
is more commonly observed in elderly patients, particularly those with hypertension,
and patients with shrunken blood volume, shrunken interstitial fluid volume,
cephalad spread of the local anesthetic, and/or mechanical obstruction of
venous return. Nausea and vomiting are frequently associated with hypotensive
episodes following the administration of spinal anesthesia. High doses, or
inadvertent intravascular injection, may lead to high plasma levels and related
depression of the myocardium, decreased cardiac output, bradycardia, heart
block, ventricular arrhythmias, and, possibly, cardiac arrest. (See WARNINGS,
PRECAUTIONS, and OVERDOSAGE sections.)
Central
Nervous System: Respiratory paralysis or underventilation secondary
to cephalad spread of the level of spinal anesthesia (see Respiratory
System) and hypotension for the same reason (see Cardiovascular
System) are the two most commonly encountered central nervous system-related
adverse observations which demand immediate countermeasures.
High doses or inadvertent intravascular injection may lead to high plasma
levels and related central nervous system toxicity characterized by excitement
and/or depression. Restlessness, anxiety, dizziness, tinnitus, blurred vision,
or tremors may occur, possibly proceeding to convulsions. However, excitement
may be transient or absent, with depression being the first manifestation
of an adverse reaction. This may quickly be followed by drowsiness merging
into unconsciousness and respiratory arrest.
Neurologic: The incidences of adverse neurologic
reactions associated with the use of local anesthetics may be related to the
total dose of local anesthetic administered and are also dependent upon the
particular drug used, the route of administration, and the physical status
of the patient. Many of these effects may be related to local anesthetic techniques,
with or without a contribution from the drug.
Neurologic
effects following spinal anesthesia may include loss of perineal sensation
and sexual function; persistent anesthesia, paresthesia, weakness and paralysis
of the lower extremities, and loss of sphincter control all of which may have
slow, incomplete, or no recovery; hypotension, high or total spinal block;
urinary retention; headache; backache; septic meningitis, meningismus; arachnoiditis;
slowing of labor; increased incidence of forceps delivery; shivering; cranial
nerve palsies due to traction on nerves from loss of cerebrospinal fluid;
and fecal and urinary incontinence.
Allergic: Allergic-type reactions are rare and may occur as a result of
sensitivity to the local anesthetic. These reactions are characterized by
signs such as urticaria, pruritus, erythema, angioneurotic edema (including
laryngeal edema), tachycardia, sneezing, nausea, vomiting, dizziness, syncope,
excessive sweating, elevated temperature, and, possibly, anaphylactoid-like
symptomatology (including severe hypotension). Cross sensitivity among members
of the amide-type local anesthetic group has been reported. The usefulness
of screening for sensitivity has not been definitely established.
Other: Nausea and vomiting may occur during
spinal anesthesia.
Overdosage
Acute emergencies from local anesthetics are generally related
to high plasma levels encountered during therapeutic use or to underventilation
(and perhaps apnea) secondary to upward extension of spinal anesthesia. Hypotension
is commonly encountered during the conduct of spinal anesthesia due to relaxation
of sympathetic tone, and sometimes, contributory mechanical obstruction of
venous return.
Management
of Local Anesthetic Emergencies: The first consideration is prevention,
best accomplished by careful and constant monitoring of cardiovascular and
respiratory vital signs and the patient’s state of consciousness after
each local anesthetic injection. At the first sign of change, oxygen should
be administered.
The
first step in the management of systemic toxic reactions, as well as underventilation
or apnea due to a high or total spinal, consists of immediate attention to the establishment and
maintenance of a patent airway and effective assisted or controlled ventilation
with 100% oxygen with a delivery system capable of permitting immediate positive
airway pressure by mask. This may prevent convulsions if they have
not already occurred.
If necessary, use drugs to control
the convulsions. A 50 mg to 100 mg bolus IV injection of succinylcholine will
paralyze the patient without depressing the central nervous or cardiovascular
systems and facilitate ventilation. A bolus IV dose of 5 mg to 10 mg of diazepam
or 50 mg to 100 mg of thiopental will permit ventilation and counteract
central nervous system stimulation, but these drugs also depress central nervous
system, respiratory and cardiac function, add to postictal depression and
may result in apnea. Intravenous barbiturates, anticonvulsant agents, or muscle
relaxants should only be administered by those familiar with their use. Immediately
after the institution of these ventilatory measures, the adequacy of the circulation
should be evaluated. Supportive treatment of circulatory depression may require
administration of intravenous fluids, and, when appropriate, a vasopressor
dictated by the clinical situation (such as ephedrine or epinephrine to enhance
myocardial contractile force).
Hypotension due to
sympathetic relaxation may be managed by giving intravenous fluids (such as
isotonic saline or lactated Ringer’s solution), in an attempt to relieve
mechanical obstruction of venous return, or by using vasopressors (such as
ephedrine which increases the force of myocardial contractions) and, if indicated,
by giving plasma expanders or whole blood.
Endotracheal
intubation, employing drugs and techniques familiar to the clinician, may
be indicated after initial administration of oxygen by mask if difficulty
is encountered in the maintenance of a patent airway, or if prolonged ventilatory
support (assisted or controlled) is indicated.
Recent
clinical data from patients experiencing local anesthetic-induced convulsions
demonstrated rapid development of hypoxia, hypercarbia, and acidosis with
bupivacaine within a minute of the onset of convulsions. These observations
suggest that oxygen consumption and carbon dioxide production are greatly
increased during local anesthetic convulsions and emphasize the importance
of immediate and effective ventilation with oxygen which may avoid cardiac
arrest.
If not treated immediately, convulsions with
simultaneous hypoxia, hypercarbia, and acidosis plus myocardial depression
from the direct effects of the local anesthetic may result in cardiac arrhythmias,
bradycardia, asystole, ventricular fibrillation, or cardiac arrest. Respiratory
abnormalities, including apnea, may occur. Underventilation or apnea due to
a high or total spinal may produce these same signs and also lead to cardiac
arrest if ventilatory support is not instituted. If cardiac arrest should
occur, standard cardiopulmonary resuscitative measures should be instituted
and maintained for a prolonged period if necessary. Recovery has been reported
after prolonged resuscitative efforts.
The supine
position is dangerous in pregnant women at term because of aortocaval compression
by the gravid uterus. Therefore during treatment of systemic toxicity, maternal
hypotension, or fetal bradycardia following regional block, the parturient
should be maintained in the left lateral decubitus position if possible, or
manual displacement of the uterus off the great vessels be accomplished.
The mean seizure dosage of bupivacaine in rhesus monkeys was found to be 4.4
mg/kg with mean arterial plasma concentration of 4.5 mcg/mL. The intravenous
and subcutaneous LD50 in mice is 6 mg/kg to 8 mg/kg and 38 mg/kg
to 54 mg/kg respectively.
Marcaine Spinal Dosage and Administration
The dose of any local anesthetic administered varies with
the anesthetic procedure, the area to be anesthetized, the vascularity of
the tissues, the number of neuronal segments to be blocked, the depth of anesthesia
and degree of muscle relaxation required, the duration of anesthesia desired,
individual tolerance, and the physical condition of the patient. The smallest
dose and concentration required to produce the desired result should be administered.
Dosages of Marcaine Spinal should be reduced for elderly and debilitated patients
and patients with cardiac and/or liver disease.
For
specific techniques and procedures, refer to standard textbooks.
The extent and degree of spinal anesthesia depend upon several factors including
dosage, specific gravity of the anesthetic solution, volume of solution used,
force of injection, level of puncture, and position of the patient during
and immediately after injection.
Seven and one-half
mg (7.5 mg or 1 mL) Marcaine Spinal has generally proven satisfactory for
spinal anesthesia for lower extremity and perineal procedures including TURP
and vaginal hysterectomy. Twelve mg (12 mg or 1.6 mL) has been used for lower
abdominal procedures such as abdominal hysterectomy, tubal ligation, and appendectomy.
These doses are recommended as a guide for use in the average adult and may
be reduced for the elderly or debilitated patients. Because experience with
Marcaine Spinal is limited in patients below the age of 18 years, dosage recommendations
in this age group cannot be made.
Obstetrical
Use: Doses as low as 6 mg bupivacaine hydrochloride have been used
for vaginal delivery under spinal anesthesia. The dose range of 7.5 mg to
10.5 mg (1 mL to 1.4 mL) bupivacaine hydrochloride has been used for Cesarean
section under spinal anesthesia.
In recommended doses,
Marcaine Spinal produces complete motor and sensory block.
Unused portions of solutions should be discarded following initial use.
Marcaine Spinal should be inspected visually for discoloration and particulate
matter prior to administration; solutions which are discolored or which contain
particulate matter should not be administered.
How is Marcaine Spinal Supplied
Single-dose ampuls of 2 mL (15 mg bupivacaine hydrochloride
with 165 mg dextrose), in Uni-Amp®ampul pak of 10 (List 1761)
Store
at controlled room temperature 15°C to 30°C (59°F to 86°F).
[See USP.]
MARCAINE Spinal
solution may be autoclaved once at 15 pound pressure, 121°C (250°F)
for 15 minutes. Do not administer any solution which is discolored or
contains particulate matter.
|
|
|
©Hospira 2004 |
EN-0428 |
Printed in USA |
HOSPIRA, INC., LAKE FOREST,
IL 60045 USA
| Marcaine Spinal (Bupivacaine Hydrochloride and Dextrose) |
|
|
|
|
Revised: 06/2006
Recent Drug Updates at Web Drug List
Aquatensen
Bleomycin
Estradiol Patch
Fexofenadine
Finasteride
Havrix
Hyosophen
Isopto Plain Ophthalmic
Konsyl-Orange
Miostat
|