Mazoit-J-X. Boico-O. Samii-K. Myocardial uptake of bupivacaine: II.
Pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics of bupivacaine enantiomers in the isolated
perfused rabbit heart. Anesth-Analg. 1993 Sep. 77(3). P 477-82.
The enantiomers of a racemic drug generally differ in their
pharmacokinetic and/or pharmacodynamic properties. Because bupivacaine is
a mixture of two optical isomers known to exert different toxic properties
on isolated nerve preparations, we decided to use an isolated rabbit heart
model with constant coronary inflow to compare the myocardial uptake kinetics
of the R(+)-, S(-)-enantiomers and the racemic mixture of bupivacaine. The
increase in QRS duration was also measured, and the inflow concentration-effect
relationship was analyzed for the three drugs. The racemic and the two
enantiomers of bupivacaine exhibited similar myocardial pharmacokinetics
with a two-compartment profile for all hearts except one. All drugs showed
a rapid decrease in the outflow concentration when drug administration was
discontinued. The tissue/perfusate concentration ratio at steady state was
similar for the three drugs. QRS widening, as well as the occurrence of severe
arrhythmias, was much less pronounced in the hearts receiving the S(-) isomer
than in the hearts receiving the R(+) isomer or the racemic mixture. Despite
the occurrence of arrhythmias, QRS widening was adequately modelled with
an Emax model. C50, the inflow perfusate concentration producing half Emax
(maximal theoretical increase in QRS duration) was the same for all three
drugs. The authors conclude that the S(-)-bupivacaine exerts less detrimental
effects on the isolated heart of the rabbit perfused at a constant coronary
flow with protein-free buffer.