Study objective: To evaluate the effects of epidural morphine on the ventilatory response to hypoxia in patients having abdominal surgery and to compare the effects of epidural lidocaine.
Design: Open-label, randomized study.
Setting: Shimane Medical University Hospital, Shimane, Japan.
Patients: Sixteen consenting, unpremedicated ASA physical status I and II patients undergoing abdominal surgery.
Interventions: Patients were administered 2 mg of morphine diluted in 10 ml of saline or 10 ml of 2% lidocaine from an epidural catheter that was inserted the day before surgery.
Measurements and main results: On the day before surgery, ventilatory parameters consisting of minute expiratory volume (VE), tidal volume (VT), respiratory frequency (f), and oxygen saturation by pulse oximeter (SpO2) were measured during resting state and hypoxic challenge. The same measurements were repeated 30 minutes after the epidural injection before surgery. The slope of VE/SpO2 decreased significantly from 1.6 +/- 0.3 to 1.2 +/- 0.2 after epidural morphine, although ventilatory values such as f, VT, VE, and PaCO2 were unchanged. Epidural lidocaine produced no significant changes in ventilatory response.
Conclusion: Epidural anesthesia with morphine, but not lidocaine, reduced the ventilatory response to hypoxia indicated by VE/SpO2.