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Important role of calcium chloride in preventing carbon monoxide generation during desflurane degradation with alkali hydroxide-free carbon dioxide absorbents.

Journal of Anesthesia 2017 December
We investigated whether calcium chloride (CaCl2 ), a supplementary additive in carbon dioxide (CO2 ) absorbents, could affect carbon monoxide (CO) production caused by desflurane degradation, using a Japanese alkali-free CO2 absorbent Yabashi Lime® -f (YL-f), its CaCl2 -free and 1% CaCl2 -added derivatives, and other commercially available alkali-free absorbents with or without CaCl2 . The reaction between 1 L of desflurane gas (3-10%) and 20 g of desiccated specimen was performed in an artificial closed-circuit anesthesia system for 3 min at 20 or 40 °C. The CO concentration was measured using a gas chromatograph equipped with a semiconductor sensor detector. The systems were validated by detecting dose-dependent CO production with an alkali hydroxide-containing CO2 absorbent, Sodasorb® . Compared with YL-f, the CaCl2 -free derivative caused the production of significantly more CO, while the 1% CaCl2 -added derivative caused the production of a comparable amount of CO. These phenomena were confirmed using commercially available absorbents AMSORB® PLUS, an alkali-free absorbent with CaCl2 , and LoFloSorb™, an alkali-free absorbent without CaCl2 . These results suggest that CaCl2 plays an important role in preventing CO generation caused by desflurane degradation with alkali hydroxide-free CO2 absorbents like YL-f.

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