Clinical use: how they show up in anaesthesia
- Premedication / anxiolysis / amnesia
- Midazolam most common: rapid onset, short duration, water-soluble formulation (less venous irritation than diazepam).
- Aim: anxiolysis + anterograde amnesia; limited analgesia (often worsens pain perception if used alone).
- Procedural sedation (endoscopy, cardioversion, radiology, ED)
- Titrate to effect; synergistic respiratory depression with opioids and other sedatives (propofol).
- Midazolam common; diazepam sometimes used (longer duration, active metabolites).
- Induction adjunct / co-induction
- Reduces induction dose of propofol/thiopentone; may improve haemodynamic stability but increases risk of apnoea when combined with opioids.
- Seizure management
- First-line acute termination: IV lorazepam (often preferred) or IV diazepam; midazolam IM/buccal/intranasal alternatives.
- Follow with longer-acting antiepileptic to prevent recurrence (e.g., levetiracetam/phenytoin) because benzodiazepine effect may wear off.
- Alcohol withdrawal / ICU sedation
- Chlordiazepoxide/diazepam commonly for withdrawal (long-acting); in ICU, midazolam infusion sometimes used but accumulation/delirium risk.
- Spinal/epidural adjunct (rare now)
- Preservative-free midazolam has been studied; not routine in UK practice—safety/benefit considerations.
Practical prescribing: typical adult doses (titrate; local policy varies)
- Midazolam IV for anxiolysis/sedation
- Incremental 0.5–1 mg every 1–2 min; many adults 1–3 mg total; elderly/frail often 0.5–1 mg total.
- Onset ~1–2 min; peak 3–5 min; duration 20–60 min (longer with age/organ dysfunction).
- Diazepam IV for sedation / seizures
- Sedation: small increments (e.g., 2.5 mg) to effect; seizures: 5–10 mg IV, repeat if needed (per guideline).
- Formulation contains propylene glycol → venous irritation, thrombophlebitis; avoid small veins.
- Lorazepam IV for status epilepticus
- Commonly 4 mg IV (adult), may repeat once after 10–15 min depending on protocol; slower redistribution than diazepam → longer anticonvulsant effect.
- Flumazenil (reversal)
- IV 0.2 mg over 15 s, then 0.1 mg every 60 s to desired consciousness (typical total 0.3–1 mg; max often 2 mg, higher in some protocols).
- Short duration (often 30–60 min) → re-sedation possible, especially after long-acting benzodiazepines.
Core pharmacology
- Class and examples
- Short/intermediate: midazolam, lorazepam, temazepam.
- Long acting: diazepam, chlordiazepoxide; many have active metabolites.
- Mechanism of action
- Bind benzodiazepine site on GABA-A receptor (between α and γ subunits) → increases frequency of chloride channel opening in presence of GABA → neuronal hyperpolarisation.
- Ceiling effect (depend on endogenous/exogenous GABA) → generally safer than barbiturates for respiratory/cardiovascular depression when used alone.
- Clinical effects
- Sedation/hypnosis, anxiolysis, anterograde amnesia, anticonvulsant, muscle relaxation.
- No intrinsic analgesia; may reduce MAC of volatile agents and reduce opioid requirements indirectly via anxiolysis.
- Pharmacokinetics (high-yield contrasts)
- High lipid solubility → rapid CNS entry; redistribution contributes to offset after single bolus (esp diazepam).
- Midazolam is water soluble in vial (acidic pH; ring closed), becomes lipid soluble at physiological pH (ring opens) → rapid onset.
- Hepatic metabolism: CYP3A4 important for midazolam; interactions with macrolides, azoles, protease inhibitors, grapefruit juice (↑ effect).
- Diazepam: hepatic metabolism to active metabolites (desmethyldiazepam/nordiazepam, oxazepam, temazepam) → prolonged sedation, especially elderly.
- Lorazepam: glucuronidation (less CYP dependence) → fewer drug interactions; still prolonged in severe hepatic dysfunction.
- Context-sensitive half-time: increases with infusion duration (notably midazolam) due to tissue accumulation.
- Pharmacodynamics and synergy
- Marked synergy with opioids, propofol, alcohol and other CNS depressants → apnoea/airway obstruction risk even with “small” doses.
- Elderly, OSA, COPD, obesity, frailty: increased sensitivity and reduced clearance → use lower doses and slower titration.
Organ system effects (FRCA patterns)
- Respiratory
- Dose-dependent depression of ventilatory response to CO2; upper airway obstruction common during sedation.
- Greatly potentiated by opioids; anticipate need for airway manoeuvres and assisted ventilation.
- Cardiovascular
- Mild reduction in SVR and BP; minimal direct myocardial depression at sedative doses; hypotension more likely with hypovolaemia, sepsis, co-induction, elderly.
- CNS / ICP
- Generally reduce cerebral metabolic rate and cerebral blood flow; maintain/possibly improve cerebral perfusion if BP maintained.
- Can cause paradoxical agitation/disinhibition (more in children, elderly, psychiatric disease).
- Other
- Central muscle relaxant effect; may worsen airway collapsibility in OSA.
- Minimal histamine release; allergy rare.
Adverse effects, cautions, contraindications
- Common adverse effects
- Over-sedation, respiratory depression/apnoea, airway obstruction, hypotension (esp with co-administered agents).
- Delirium (especially ICU, elderly), psychomotor impairment, falls risk.
- Paradoxical reactions
- Restlessness, aggression, involuntary movements; manage with reassurance, reduce stimuli; consider small dose propofol or antipsychotic; flumazenil may help but weigh seizure risk.
- Dependence and withdrawal
- Long-term use → tolerance and dependence; abrupt cessation → anxiety, tremor, insomnia, seizures; important in perioperative history.
- Special populations
- Elderly: increased sensitivity, prolonged effect → reduce dose and titrate slowly.
- Hepatic impairment: reduced clearance (esp diazepam/midazolam); lorazepam often less affected (glucuronidation) but still caution.
- Renal failure: active metabolites (diazepam) may accumulate; midazolam metabolites can accumulate in critical illness/renal dysfunction.
- Pregnancy: crosses placenta; neonatal depression possible; avoid routine premed; if used, be prepared for neonatal resuscitation.
Flumazenil (benzodiazepine antagonist) — key points
- Mechanism
- Reverses sedation/psychomotor impairment; does not reverse respiratory depression due to opioids or other sedatives.
- Indications
- Iatrogenic over-sedation (procedural sedation, anaesthesia).
- Diagnostic/therapeutic trial in suspected isolated benzodiazepine overdose (with caution).
- Risks / contraindications (exam favourites)
- Can precipitate seizures in: mixed overdose with pro-convulsants (e.g., TCAs), benzodiazepine dependence, epilepsy treated with benzodiazepines.
- Short duration → re-sedation; observe and consider infusion in selected cases (specialist setting).
Describe the mechanism of action of benzodiazepines at the GABA-A receptor and contrast with barbiturates.
Expected structure: receptor site → channel effect → dependence on GABA → clinical implications.
- Benzodiazepines bind to the benzodiazepine site on the GABA-A receptor at the α–γ subunit interface.
- They are positive allosteric modulators: increase the frequency of chloride channel opening in the presence of GABA → hyperpolarisation.
- They have a ceiling effect because they do not directly open the channel without GABA (relative safety when used alone).
- Barbiturates increase the duration of channel opening and at high doses can directly activate GABA-A → greater risk of profound CNS/respiratory depression.
Midazolam is described as water soluble in the ampoule but lipid soluble in the body. Explain why and why it matters clinically.
This is a common FRCA pharmacology viva: chemical form, pH dependence, onset and venous irritation.
- Midazolam is formulated in an acidic solution where it exists predominantly in a water-soluble ionised/ring-closed form.
- At physiological pH, the molecule shifts to a more lipid-soluble form → rapid CNS penetration and onset.
- Clinical consequences: less pain/irritation on injection than diazepam; fast onset makes it suitable for titrated sedation.
Compare midazolam, diazepam and lorazepam in terms of onset, duration, metabolism and clinically important metabolites.
Aim for a table-like verbal answer: formulation/solubility, redistribution, metabolism, active metabolites, typical use.
- Midazolam: rapid onset; relatively short after bolus but prolonged with infusion; hepatic CYP3A4 metabolism; active metabolites can accumulate in critical illness/renal dysfunction; strong interaction potential (azoles/macrolides).
- Diazepam: very lipid soluble → rapid onset; long duration due to redistribution + active metabolites (nordiazepam/oxazepam/temazepam) → prolonged sedation; formulation with propylene glycol causes venous irritation.
- Lorazepam: intermediate onset; longer anticonvulsant effect than diazepam (less rapid redistribution); mainly glucuronidation (fewer CYP interactions); no major active metabolites of the same clinical significance as diazepam.
A patient becomes apnoeic after 2 mg midazolam and 50 micrograms fentanyl for endoscopy. Explain the physiology/pharmacology and how you would manage it.
This is a frequent sedation scenario: synergy, airway obstruction, stepwise management, reversal agents and observation.
- Cause: synergistic ventilatory depression (reduced CO2 response) + increased upper airway collapsibility from benzodiazepine sedation; fentanyl adds respiratory depression and chest wall rigidity rarely.
- Immediate management: call for help, stop procedure, airway manoeuvres (chin lift/jaw thrust), high-flow O2, suction, consider adjuncts (OPA/NPA), support ventilation with bag-mask; monitor capnography if available.
- If inadequate: consider naloxone (opioid reversal) and/or flumazenil (benzodiazepine reversal) depending on likely dominant agent; beware acute pain, agitation, aspiration risk.
- After recovery: observe for re-sedation (especially if long-acting agents used), document event, review dosing strategy and patient factors (age, OSA, frailty).
Outline the indications, dosing and major risks of flumazenil.
Common FRCA short note: mechanism, dose, duration, seizure risk, re-sedation, when not to use.
- Indications: reversal of iatrogenic benzodiazepine sedation; selected cases of suspected isolated benzodiazepine overdose.
- Dose: 0.2 mg IV over 15 s, then 0.1 mg IV every 60 s to effect (typical 0.3–1 mg; max per protocol).
- Risks: seizures (mixed overdose e.g. TCA, benzodiazepine dependence, epilepsy treated with benzodiazepines), agitation, arrhythmias rarely; re-sedation due to short half-life.
- If used: ensure airway/ventilation support available; observe after administration; consider repeat dosing/infusion only in monitored settings.
Explain why benzodiazepines can reduce MAC of volatile agents and how this influences anaesthetic technique.
- Benzodiazepines enhance inhibitory GABAergic neurotransmission → sedation/hypnosis and reduced arousal → reduced MAC requirement for volatiles.
- Practical implications: lower volatile concentration may be needed; beware hypotension when combining multiple hypnotics; do not mistake amnesia for adequate depth/analgesia.
Discuss the effects of benzodiazepines on cerebral physiology (CBF, CMRO2, ICP) and their role in neuroanaesthesia.
- They generally decrease CMRO2 and decrease CBF, leading to reduced ICP provided ventilation and haemodynamics are controlled.
- Main limitation is systemic effects (hypoventilation → hypercapnia → ↑ CBF/ICP; hypotension → ↓ CPP).
A 78-year-old with frailty and OSA needs sedation for a painful procedure. How does age/OSA change your benzodiazepine plan?
- Increased pharmacodynamic sensitivity and reduced clearance → use much smaller doses, slow titration, allow time to peak effect.
- OSA increases risk of upper airway obstruction; prioritise positioning, airway adjunct readiness, capnography, and consider alternatives (local/regional, minimal sedation).
- Avoid combining with opioids where possible; if needed, reduce both and titrate one agent at a time.
Why is lorazepam often preferred to diazepam for status epilepticus (where available)?
- Lorazepam has less rapid redistribution from brain to peripheral tissues than diazepam → longer duration of anticonvulsant effect after IV dose.
- Diazepam terminates seizures quickly but effect may wear off sooner, risking recurrence unless followed by longer-acting antiepileptic therapy.
Describe important drug interactions with midazolam and the mechanism.
- Midazolam is metabolised by CYP3A4.
- CYP3A4 inhibitors (e.g., azole antifungals, macrolides, protease inhibitors, grapefruit) can markedly increase and prolong sedation/respiratory depression.
- Enzyme inducers (e.g., rifampicin, some anticonvulsants) may reduce effect; clinical relevance depends on chronicity and dose.
Explain context-sensitive half-time and why midazolam infusions can lead to delayed waking in ICU.
- Context-sensitive half-time is the time for plasma concentration to fall by 50% after stopping an infusion; it depends on infusion duration and redistribution/metabolism.
- With prolonged midazolam infusion, drug accumulates in peripheral compartments; on stopping, it redistributes back to plasma and clearance may be reduced in critical illness → delayed emergence.
List the main adverse effects of benzodiazepines relevant to perioperative practice and how you mitigate them.
- Respiratory depression/airway obstruction: titrate slowly, avoid opioid co-administration if possible, use monitoring (including capnography), be ready to support ventilation.
- Hypotension: avoid large boluses, correct hypovolaemia, consider alternative agents in unstable patients.
- Delirium/falls (elderly): avoid routine premed, minimise dose, consider non-pharmacological anxiolysis.
- Paradoxical agitation: recognise early, reduce stimulation, consider alternative sedation strategy; flumazenil only with careful risk assessment.
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