(a) myelinated fibres with unmyelinated fibres; and
(b) pressure/touch nerves with the dorsal nerves that transmit pain impulses?
a. The smaller and myelinated fibers are blocked much easier in comparison to the larger, unmyelinated fibers which are much less sensitive to blockade by the local anesthetics.
b. Activated pain fibers fire rapidly, thus pain sensation may be selectively blocked by local anesthetics. Fibers that are located in the periphery of nerve thick nerve bundles are blocked sooner than the fibers located in the core of thick nerve bundles. This is because they are exposed too higher concentrations of the anesthetic much earlier.
Heart: Local anaesthetics have Class I anti-arrhythmic drug effects resulting in cardiac depression
Skeletal muscle: Weak blocking effects, no clinical application.
A local anaesthetic is chosen due to the following factors:
The Carbon Dioxide acts as a buffer to the Local Anaesthetic. This will potentiate the effects of the local anaesthetic.
Brand, L. 2021. Local Anesthetics. Study Unit 6 [PowerPoint Presentation]. Unpublished Lecture Notes on eFundi. FKLG 312. Potchefstroom:NWU.