ETOMIDATE 

1. BASIC PHARMACOLOGY

Etomidate is a non-barbiturate imidazole derivative used primarily for induction of anesthesia, especially in hemodynamically unstable patients.

Key Properties

  • Ultra–short acting hypnotic (no analgesia)
  • Highly cardiovascularly stable
  • Minimal respiratory depression (compared to other agents)
  • Strong adrenal suppression effect

2. MECHANISM OF ACTION

  • Potentiates GABA-A receptor
  • Chloride influx neuronal hyperpolarization hypnosis

 No analgesic effect must combine with opioids if needed


 3. PHARMACOKINETICS

Parameter

Details

Onset

30–60 sec

Peak effect

~1 min

Duration

3–10 min

 4. DOSING IN ICU 

 Induction (RSI / Intubation)

  • 0.2–0.3 mg/kg IV bolus
  • Reduce dose in:
    • Elderly
    • Shock (0.15–0.2 mg/kg)

 Continuous infusion  (AVOID)

  • NOT recommended due to adrenal suppression

5. HEMODYNAMIC PROFILE

Parameter

Effect

BP

Minimal decrease

HR

Stable

CO

Maintained

SVR

Minimal change

 Best induction agent in:

  • Septic shock
  • Cardiogenic shock
  • Trauma with hypotension

 6. CNS EFFECTS

  • Cerebral metabolic rate (CMRO₂)
  • ICP
  • Maintains CPP

 Useful in:

  • Traumatic brain injury (TBI)
  • Neurocritical care

 7. RESPIRATORY EFFECTS

  • Mild respiratory depression
  • Preserves airway reflexes better than propofol

 8. ADRENAL SUPPRESSION 

Mechanism

  • Inhibits 11-β-hydroxylase + 17-α-hydroxylase
  • Cortisol + aldosterone synthesis

Duration

  • After single bolus: 6–24 hours suppression

Clinical Impact

  • Controversial in:
    • Septic shock
    • Critically ill patients

Evidence 

  • Transient suppression documented
  • Mortality impact unclear (conflicting RCTs/meta-analyses)
  • Guidelines caution but do NOT absolutely contraindicate single dose

 9. GUIDELINE RECOMMENDATIONS

 Surviving Sepsis Campaign

  • Avoid routine use in septic shock if alternatives available
  • Single-dose acceptable if hemodynamically unstable

Society of Critical Care Medicine

  • Etomidate acceptable for RSI
  • Be aware of adrenal suppression

 10. CLINICAL INDICATIONS IN ICU

 Preferred situations

  • Hemodynamic instability
  • Shock (septic, cardiogenic, hemorrhagic)
  • TBI with hypotension
  • Emergency RSI

 Avoid / caution

  • Septic shock (relative)
  • Adrenal insufficiency
  • Long-term sedation

 11. ADVERSE EFFECTS

Common

  • Myoclonus (30–60%)
  • Injection pain (less than propofol)
  • Nausea/vomiting

Serious

  • Adrenal suppression 
  • Seizure-like activity (non-epileptic myoclonus)
  • Rare anaphylaxis

12. MYOCLONUS 

  • Occurs due to disinhibition of subcortical centers
  • Prevention:
    • Small dose benzodiazepine (e.g., Midazolam)
    • Opioid pre-treatment

13. COMPARISON WITH OTHER INDUCTION AGENTS

Feature

Etomidate

Propofol

Ketamine

BP

Stable

↓↓↓

/ stable

ICP

(relative)

Adrenal suppression

YES

NO

NO

Analgesia

NO

NO

YES

Myoclonus

YES

NO

NO