Nondepolarizing Neuromuscular Blocking Agents
Table 1. Commonly used nondepolarizing NMBAs. Adapted from Butterworth JF, Mackey DC, Wasnick JD. Morgan and Mikhail’s Clinical Anesthesiology, 7th Edition. McGraw Hill; 2022.
a Doses of 1-1.2 mg/kg IV provide intubating conditions comparable to succinylcholine for rapid sequence intubation.
b IM administration of 1 mg/kg (infants) or 1.8 mg/kg (children) produces intubating conditions in 2.5-3 minutes.
c The amount of NMBA required to reduce twitch height by 95%
Aminosteroids tend not to cause histamine release but their metabolism is organ dependent.
- Chronic administration of anticonvulsants can lead to resistance to the effects of aminosteroid NMBAs due to stimulation of hepatic microsomal enzymes and upregulation of ACh receptors.
Pancuronium
- Dosing: 0.1-0.15 mg/kg produces intubating conditions in 90-120 seconds (0.06-0.1 mg/kg 2-3 min) with a duration of action of 40-80 minutes.
- Long-acting
- Adverse effects: Vagolytic effect may cause a transient increase in heart rate and blood pressure. This may result in atrial tachyarrhythmias.
- Elimination/Metabolism: primarily renal elimination (80%)
- Hepatic metabolism via hydroxylation to an active 3-OH metabolite (50% neuromuscular blocking effects) with dependence on renal excretion
- Chronic renal failure (CRF) increases pancuronium’s elimination half-life by 97%.
Vecuronium
- Dosing: 0.1-0.15 mg/kg results in intubating conditions in 80-90 seconds with a duration of 30-40 minutes.
- 0.3 mg/kg shortens the onset to 60-75 seconds while increasing the duration of action to 60-90 minutes.
- The primary metabolite 3-desacetylvecuronium has 80% neuromuscular blocking activity.
- 20-30% excreted by the kidneys unchanged.
- Duration of action is prolonged in patients with liver failure and in neonates and young infants due to immature hepatic microsomal enzymes.
- Elimination half time is increased by 24-56% in patients with CRF resulting in a prolonged and variable duration of action.
Rocuronium
- Dosing: 0.6-1.2 mg/kg IV results in intubating conditions in less than 2 minutes with a duration of action of 20-90 minutes.