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Encyclopedia > Sodium pentothal

Sodium thiopental (also called sodium pentothal (™ of Abbott Laboratories), thiopental (or thiopentone) sodium) is a rapid-onset, short-acting barbiturate general anesthetic.


It induces general anaesthesia within 60 seconds of intravenous injection and lasts around 10-30 minutes. Up until fairly recently it was the most popular anesthetic induction agent in many parts of the world. However, in recent years it has been overtaken by propofol, particularly for day surgery.


Thiopental has no analgesic effects so it is only used as a single agent for brief procedures. More commonly, it is used to induce anesthesia prior to the use of other anesthetic agents. It is also a neuroprotective agent and was used in narcotherapy.


As with nearly all anaesthetic drugs, thiopental causes cardiovascular and respiratory depression resulting in hypotension, apnea and airway obstruction. For these reasons, only anesthesiologists and other suitably trained doctors should give thiopental in an environment suitably equipped to deal with these effects. Side effects include head ache, emergence delirium, prolonged somnolence and nausea. The hangover effects may last up to 36 hours.

chemical structure of thiopental sodium

Its structural name is sodium 5-ethyl-5-(1-methylbutyl)-2-thiobarbiturate, empirically it is NaSC11H17O2N2. It was discovered in 1936 by Ernest H. Volwiler and Donalee L. Tabern, working for Abbott Laboratories. It was famously associated with a number of anaesthetic deaths in victims of the Pearl Harbor invasion. These deaths, relatively soon after its discovery, were due to excessive doses given to shocked trauma patients.


Along with pancuronium bromide and potassium chloride thiopental is used in some States of the US as part of the lethal injection. In the past it was claimed as a truth drug.


External links

  • Scienceweb.org: Sodium Pentothal (http://www.scienceweb.org/tv/highincident.html)

  Results from FactBites:
 
Pentothal Indications, Dosage, Storage, Stability - Thiopental Sodium - RxList Monographs (2118 words)
When Pentothal (Thiopental Sodium for Injection, USP) is used as the sole anesthetic agent, the desired level of anesthesia can be maintained by injection of small repeated doses as needed or by using a continuous intravenous drip in a 0.2% or 0.4% concentration.
Pentothal should be considered to have the same potential for producing respiratory depression as an inhalation agent, and patency of the airway must be protected at all times.
The diluent in Pentothal Ready-to-Mix Syringes is supplied in a separate container to permit mixing with the Pentothal in a powder vial to permit immediate intravenous injection of reconstituted solution into a vein or attachment to a standard stopcock assembly.
Manipulation under Anesthesia: Neurological Effects of Different Modes of Anesthesia | Brad McKechnie, DC, DACAN (675 words)
Sodium Pentothal produces induction of anesthesia within 60 seconds of administration, reflecting its rapidity of central nervous system penetration.
Sodium Pentothal's liver clearance rate is from 15-20 percent per hour.
Versed has effects similar to those of sodium Pentothal with the exception that the memory loss for events occurring during the procedure is greater than with sodium Pentothal.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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