Question:
2. Actions: depolarizing agents
Author: SuzukiAnswer:
The sequence of paralysis may be slightly different, but, as with the competitive blockers, the respiratory muscles are paralyzed last. Succinylcholine initially produces brief muscle fasciculations and a ganglionic block except at high doses, but it does have weak histamine-releasing action. [Note: Administering a small dose of nondepolarizing neuromuscular blocker prior to succinylcholine helps decrease or prevent the fasciculations which cause muscle soreness.] Normally, the duration of action of succinylcholine is extremely short, because this drug is rapidly broken down by plasma pseudocholinesterase. However, succinylcholine that gets to the NMJ is not metabolized by AChE, allowing the agent to bind to nicotinic receptors, and redistribution to plasma is necessary for metabolism (therapeutic benefits last only for a few minutes). [Note: Genetic variants in which plasma pseudocholinesterase levels are low or absent leads to prolonged neuromuscular paralysis.]
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