Influence of Morphine Anaesthesia on the Endocrine‐Metabolic Response to Open‐Heart Surgery

Abstract
Twelve patients scheduled for aortic valve replacement during extracorporal circulation were randomly allocated to either morphine anaesthesia or fluroxene anaesthesia. Morphine in a total dose of 4 mg/kg was administered before skin incision. At the start of extracorporal circulation all patients received 25 g glucose intravascularly. The endocrine-metabolic response to surgery, as expressed by changes in plasma ACTH, cortisol, insulin, growth hormone, cyclic adenosine-3',-5'-monophosphate (cyclic AMP), glucose, free fatty acids, blood b-hydroxybutyrate and cumulative nitrogen balance was measured before and during anaesthesia and surgery, and on the first five post-operative days. It was found that morphine anaesthesia blocked the increase in ACTH, cortisol, growth hormone, cyclic AMP, and glucose during surgery. However, after initiation of extracorporal circulation only ACTH, cortisol, and, to a lesser degree, the glucose and insulin response to glucose were lowered by morphine anaesthesia. From the first to the fifth days after operation no differences between the two groups could be demonstrated in any parameter. Cumulative nitrogen balance was similar in the two groups. It is concluded that morphine in large doses administered before skin incision inhibits the initial endocrine-metabolic response to open-heart surgery, but that the effect is short-lasting and without effect on overall postoperative protein catabolism.