Emergence From Anesthesia – Tissue Blood Partition Co-Efficient and Other Factors (2 tutorials)

Part 1 – Tissue Blood Partition Co-Efficients

This tutorial explains why emergence from volatile anesthesia depends on more than simply turning off the vaporizer. It reviews how blood gas partition coefficients influence onset, how oil gas partition coefficients relate to potency and MAC, and then focuses on tissue blood partition coefficients as a key determinant of recovery. The tutorial describes anesthetic uptake into blood, muscle, and fat during short, intermediate, and long cases, showing how tissue storage increases with time and with agent solubility. It also explains tissue back diffusion, where anesthetic stored in tissues continues to return to the blood and brain after the vaporizer is turned off, delaying wake-up. Finally, it compares volatile agents such as nitrous oxide, desflurane, sevoflurane, isoflurane, halothane, and methoxyflurane, emphasizing how lower tissue solubility produces faster, more predictable emergence.

Part 2 – Other Factors that Impact Emergence from Anesthesia

This tutorial examines the additional factors that determine how quickly a patient wakes after volatile anesthesia. It covers the concentration-flow ramp, fresh gas flow, alveolar ventilation, and cardiac output, explaining how these influence washout of anesthetic from the lungs and circulation. It discusses the effects of poor gas exchange, atelectasis, duration of surgery, higher inspired concentrations, and obesity on tissue loading and delayed emergence. The tutorial also reviews hysteresis and MAC awake, showing why patients can remain asleep at concentrations lower than those required for induction. Other important contributors such as hypothermia, opioids, benzodiazepines, propofol, dexmedetomidine, clonidine, ketamine, and nitrous oxide are included, along with a discussion of spontaneous ventilation versus intermittent positive pressure ventilation. The overall message is that emergence depends on both how efficiently the lungs clear anesthetic and how much anesthetic the body gives back

Tutorial 7: Understanding Ventilatory Failure, Alveolar Gas, Lung Volumes and Dead Space.

Clinicians who work in anesthesiology, intensive care or emergency medicine who are involved in the management of respiratory failure must understand the problem of failure to ventilate: “can’t breathe, won’t breathe.” This long tutorial covers a lot of ground and could be viewed in split sessions.

My principle goal is to give you the tools to work the problem of respiratory failure. Along the way I introduce the alveolar gas equation, ventilation perfusion matching and lung volumes; particularly functional residual capacity. In the second half (from 28:20 onwards), I discuss anatomical and physiological dead space, calculate out the dead space to tidal volume ratio and show how you can be inadvertently increasing physiologic dead space by applying PEEP or neglecting auto-PEEP.

Even if you think you know a lot about this subject, I guarantee that you will learn something.

As always, I welcome feedback.

Don’t Be Scared of Respiratory Physiology – it makes sense (well, most of it anyway!)