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Local anesthetics

Local anesthetics reversibly block impulse conduction along nerve axons and other excitable membranes that utilize sodium channels as the p...

Local anesthetics reversibly block impulse conduction along nerve axons and other excitable membranes that utilize sodium channels as the primary means of action potential generation. Clinically, local anesthetics are used to block pain sensation from—or sympathetic vasoconstrictor impulses to—specific areas of the body. The first local anesthetic introduced into medical practice, cocaine, was isolated by Niemann in 1860 and introduced into practice by Koller in 1884 as an ophthalmic anesthetic. Despite the fact that its chronic use was associated with psychological dependence (addiction), cocaine was used clinically because it was the only local anesthetic drug available for 30 years. In an attempt to improve upon the clinical properties of cocaine, Einhorn in 1905 synthesized procaine, which became the dominant local anesthetic for the next 50 years. Subsequently, newer local anesthetics were introduced with the goal of reducing local tissue irritation, minimizing systemic cardiac and central nervous system (CNS) toxicity, and achieving a faster onset and longer duration of action. Lidocaine, which is still the most widely used local anesthetic, was synthesized in 1943 by Löfgren.

Local anesthetics bind reversibly to a specific receptor site within the pore of the Na+ channels in nerves and block ion movement through this pore. When applied locally to nerve tissue in appropriate concentrations, local anesthetics can act on any part of the nervous system and on every type of nerve fiber, reversibly blocking the action potentials responsible for nerve conduction. Thus, a local anesthetic in contact with a nerve trunk can cause both sensory and motor paralysis in the area innervated. These effects of clinically relevant concentrations of local anesthetics are reversible with recovery of nerve function and no evidence of damage to nerve fibers or cells in most clinical applications.

History. The first local anesthetic, cocaine, was serendipitously discovered to have anesthetic properties in the late 19th century. Cocaine occurs in abundance in the leaves of the coca shrub (Erythroxylon coca). For centuries, Andean natives have chewed an alkali extract of these leaves for its stimulatory and euphoric actions. Cocaine was first isolated in 1860 by Albert Niemann. He, like many chemists of that era, tasted his newly isolated compound and noted that it caused a numbing of the tongue. Sigmund Freud studied cocaine's physiological actions, and Carl Koller introduced cocaine into clinical practice in 1884 as a topical anesthetic for ophthalmological surgery. Shortly thereafter, Halstead popularized its use in infiltration and conduction block anesthesia.


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