MINIMUM ALVEOLAR CONCENTRATION


'Minimum alveolar concentration' or 'MAC' is a concept used to compare the strengths of anaesthetic vapours; in simple terms, it is defined as the concentration of the vapour in the lungs that is needed to prevent movement (motor response) in 50% of subjects in response to surgical (pain) stimulus. Thus, it is actually a ''median'' value; the use of ''minimum'' would appear to be descended from the original paper in which the concept appeared, although the term there was '''minimal'' alveolar concentration'. If MAC is 1.0, then 1.3 MAC would block response in 99% of subjects.
Other uses of MAC include MAC-BAR (1.7-2.0 MAC), which is the concentration required to block autonomic reflexes to nociceptive stimuli, and MAC-awake (0.3-0.5 MAC), the concentration required to block voluntary reflexes and control perceptive awareness.

Contents
Formal definition
Meyer-Overton hypothesis
References
Bibliography
External links

Formal definition


The MAC is the concentration of the vapour (measured as a percentage at 1 atmosphere, i.e the partial pressure) that prevents the reaction to a standard surgical stimulus (traditionally a set depth and width of skin incisions) in 50% of subjects. This measurement is done at steady state (assuming a constant alveolar concentration for 15 minutes), under the assumption that this allows for an equilibration between the gasses in the alveoli, the blood and the brain.

Meyer-Overton hypothesis


The MAC of a volatile substance is inversely proportional to its lipid solubility (oil:gas coefficient) , in most cases. This is the 'Meyer-Overton hypothesis'. MAC is inversely related to potency i.e. high mac equals low potency.
The hypothesis correlates lipid solubility of an anaesthetic agent with potency (1/MAC) and suggests that onset of anaesthesia occurs when sufficient molecules of the anaesthetic agent have dissolved in the cell's lipid membranes, resulting in anaesthesia. Exceptions to the Meyer-Overton hypothesis can result from:

★ convulsant property of an agent

★ specific receptor (various agents may exhibit an additional effect through specific receptors)

★ Alpha 2 agonist effects decrease the MAC

★ Mullin's critical volume hypothesis

★ activation of GABA

References


Bibliography


External links



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