Neuromuscular Blocking Agents
Neuromuscular blocking agents (NMBAs) are drugs that interrupt transmission at the neuromuscular junction to produce skeletal-muscle paralysis. In critical care they are used selectively — for example to facilitate intubation, to control severe ventilator dyssynchrony, or in early severe acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) — and always alongside, never as a substitute for, adequate sedation and analgesia.
Definition
Neuromuscular blocking agents are drugs that act at the neuromuscular junction to prevent skeletal-muscle contraction, producing controlled paralysis; they are classified as depolarising or non-depolarising according to their action on the postsynaptic acetylcholine receptor.
Scope
This topic covers the pharmacological classes of neuromuscular blockers, their mechanism at the neuromuscular junction, the principal critical-care indications, and the key trial evidence in ARDS. It also notes the essential safety principle that paralysed patients require concurrent sedation and analgesia. It is a reference overview, not a guide to selecting, dosing or monitoring these agents.
Key concepts
- Neuromuscular junction and acetylcholine receptor
- Depolarising blockers (e.g. succinylcholine)
- Non-depolarising blockers (e.g. rocuronium, cisatracurium)
- Indications: intubation, severe dyssynchrony, early severe ARDS
- Mandatory concurrent sedation and analgesia
- Train-of-four monitoring of blockade depth
- ICU-acquired weakness as a potential harm
Mechanisms
Neuromuscular blockers interrupt signalling at the neuromuscular junction, where acetylcholine normally binds postsynaptic receptors to trigger muscle contraction. Non-depolarising agents competitively block the acetylcholine receptor, preventing depolarisation; depolarising agents such as succinylcholine first activate then desensitise the receptor, causing transient fasciculation followed by paralysis. Because these drugs abolish movement but have no sedative or analgesic effect, a paralysed patient who is inadequately sedated can be awake and in pain without being able to signal it — the rationale for always pairing blockade with sufficient sedation and analgesia. Depth of blockade can be monitored with peripheral nerve stimulation (train-of-four).
Clinical relevance
NMBAs enable specific critical-care interventions but carry distinct risks (awareness if under-sedated, and ICU-acquired weakness), so understanding their mechanism and the bounded indications for their use is important in critical care. This entry summarises the evidence and safety principles for orientation; it is not a protocol for administering paralytics.
Evidence & guidelines
In early severe ARDS, the ACURASYS trial (Papazian et al., 2010) reported improved outcomes with a short course of cisatracurium, but the later, larger ROSE trial (PETAL Network, 2019), conducted with a lighter-sedation comparator, found no mortality benefit — so current guidance reserves continuous neuromuscular blockade for selected situations. The 2018 PADIS guidelines (Devlin et al.) frame blockade within an analgesia- and sedation-first approach.
History
Curare-derived agents introduced controlled paralysis into anaesthesia in the mid-twentieth century. In critical care, enthusiasm for routine paralysis in respiratory failure was tempered by concerns about awareness and ICU-acquired weakness; the ACURASYS (2010) and ROSE (2019) trials then defined and narrowed the evidence-based role of early neuromuscular blockade in ARDS.
Debates
- Does early neuromuscular blockade improve survival in severe ARDS?
- ACURASYS suggested a benefit from early cisatracurium, but the larger ROSE trial — using a light-sedation control arm — found no mortality difference, so the value of routine early blockade in ARDS remains contested and context-dependent.
Key figures
- Laurent Papazian
- John Devlin
Related topics
Seminal works
- papazian-2010
- petal-rose-2019
Frequently asked questions
- Why must a paralysed patient also be sedated?
- Neuromuscular blockers stop movement but produce no sedation or pain relief, so without adequate sedation and analgesia a paralysed patient could be awake and in pain yet unable to communicate.
- Are neuromuscular blockers used routinely in the ICU?
- No; they are reserved for specific indications such as facilitating intubation, controlling severe ventilator dyssynchrony, or selected cases of early severe ARDS, because of risks including awareness and ICU-acquired weakness.