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Anyone know how much gas (ie .3 mac) it takes to cause reliable amnesia.....hows about N2O?
Most of the staff I've worked with have claimed .5-.6 MAC will give you reliable amnesia. Can't quote any studies, though.MAC awake w/ volatiles is around .3
Don't think there is a reliable MAC with nitrous (alone) for amnesia
don't quote me on those 👍
1 MAC is reliable however, not absolute.
Anything less, not reliable.
Like someone said, these levels are 50th percentile.
some of the awareness studies showed a 0.7 MAC level to be fairly reliable at least compared to BIS monitoring. However, the quality of the study probably wasnt optimal.
I've noticed that my patients seem highly amnestic right after emergence, but I've always wondered whether their recall increases as they come back to their senses post-op. Are there any studies out there looking at interval changes in perioperative recall?Ask your patients later how much they actually remember when they appear to be awake, extubated, talking to you, following commands, moving over to the stretcher, wheeled down the hall, into the PACU, etc., etc.
You'll be surprised just how much true "amnesia" is still going on, despite them having rapidly-approaching-zero-MAC volatile anesthetic on-board.
High MAC (> 0.7) pretty much assures amnesia, but doesn't guarantee it. Likewise, low MAC doesn't automatically mean that they're going to remember either. Just can't be certain they won't.
-copro
I am only a 4th year student, but I read that 1 MAC is the 50th percentile and that a standard deviation is 0.1 MAC so at 1.2MAC you'll have 95% of patients with reliable anesthesia and at 1.3MAC you'll have 99% of the patiants covered. hope this helps.
You're right but the concept is better thought of as the ED50, ED95, ED99 of a drug (assuming the definition of effective dose = immobility to clamping your rat's tail).
I am only a 4th year student, but I read that 1 MAC is the 50th percentile and that a standard deviation is 0.1 MAC so at 1.2MAC you'll have 95% of patients with reliable anesthesia and at 1.3MAC you'll have 99% of the patiants covered. hope this helps.
I've noticed that my patients seem highly amnestic right after emergence, but I've always wondered whether their recall increases as they come back to their senses post-op. Are there any studies out there looking at interval changes in perioperative recall?
I haven't come across anything on a "MAC-anmesia".
I've found MAC, MAC-awake, MAC-intubation and MAC-bar (beta adrenergic response). The B-Unaware (NEJM 3/13/08) study probably gives the best evidence for a MAC-aware, but I haven't found anything specifically testing awareness/amnesia and MAC.