Clinical Response to Magnesium Sulfate as an Adjunct in the Anesthesia
Status:
Not yet recruiting
Trial end date:
2024-07-31
Target enrollment:
Participant gender:
Summary
Magnesium sulfate (MgSO4) has multiple desirable effects in an anesthetic procedure,
including modulation of the hemodynamic response to surgical stress, perioperative anesthetic
and analgesic effect, potentiation of neuromuscular blockade, and central nervous system
depression. MgSO4 is an antagonist of the N-methyl-d-aspartic acid (NMDA) receptor, therefore
it produces an analgesic effect related to the prevention of central sensitization caused by
peripheral tissue damage.
Objective. To evaluate the perioperative clinical response to MgSO4 as an adjunct to
anesthesia.
Material and method. Randomized, triple-blind clinical trial that will include men and women
over 18 years of age, scheduled for surgery under general or regional anesthesia. After
accepting and signing the informed consent, all patients will be subjected to the same pre,
trans and postoperative protocol and will be assigned to 2 groups according to the
intravenous administration of MgSO4 (placebo and MgSO4). A brief preoperative medical history
will be taken, a peripheral blood sample will be taken to determine preoperative serum Mg,
the clinical effect of MgSO4 on trans and postoperative analgesia (EVAD), hemodynamic
stability (blood pressure (BP) and heart rate ( HR)), motor and neuromuscular block time
(Bromage and TOF), and recovery time. The presence of adverse reactions to anesthesia
(nausea, vomiting, chills, pruritus, urinary retention, arrhythmias, laryngeal or bronchial
spasm) and those secondary to the administration of Mg, SO4, as well as the total doses of
all drugs used during the perioperative. The data will be analyzed in the SPSS software.