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The volatile anesthetics continue to be one of the most mysterious
yet commonly used class of drugs in medical practice today. A
prominent and troublesome side effect of volatile anesthetics is
their ability to alter hemodynamics. This arises from two diverse
but interrelated phenomena, depression of cardiac contractility and
dilation of the vasculature. These effects of volatile anesthetics
on cardiac and smooth muscle plus the action of volatile
anesthetics on skeletal muscle in the malignant hyperthermic
syndrome have led to concern about the interaction of volatile
anesthetics (and other anesthetic agents) with calcium metabolism
in the muscle cell. Many of the phenomena caused by anesthetics
appear to have common mechanisms in all of the muscle types;
however, the differences among skeletal, cardiac and smooth muscle
also lead to distinct effects of the anesthetics in each. Given the
diverse research disciplines which have been brought to hear on the
mechanism of anesthetic alteration of contractility, the symposium
from which this book originates was convened for the purpose of
gathering those with common interests in anesthetic agents and
their cellular and subcellular actions in muscle. The recent
symposium had its origins in a small but exciting meeting that took
place at the University of Texas at Houston in 1984. At that time,
Robert Merin and Jacques Chelly convened a group of people who had
interest in cardiac muscle and calcium antagonists.
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