Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
I would like to find prehospital providers who use ketamine for pain managment or any other use and what you think of it.
Wonderful stuff. We have it on the air ambulance. It's my first line drug for intubation of crashing asthmatics, hypotensive trauma patients and now there is some evidence that it has neuroprotective effects and might be beneficial in head trauma. The old advice about avoiding it in head trauma to avoid increases in ICP appears to have no basis in evidence.
It is also ideal for pain control in severe burns and long bone fractures that are not controlled by morphine or fentanyl.
causing increased ICP or is all of that unfounded
The only problem with using ketamine for analgesia is it's awful bloody wasteful; 200mg/2ml into a 100ml pack of D5 to make 2mg/ml means that you end up throwing out most of what was in the vial.
Some for the patient and some for Brown when he gets home for the weekend?
Is the stuff used as a party drug down there like it is used in some circles up here? If it is, that would explain how Brown is getting his hands on it.
The justification for using it in asthmatics is due to its bronchodialatory effect right.
Do you the the sedative effect of the med helps out as well. And what sort of doses are you using in asthmatics?
Do you the the sedative effect of the med helps out as well. And what sort of doses are you using in asthmatics?
Ketamine for use with asthmatics is given as an induction agent to provide anaesthesia for intubation, so yes we are utilising the hypnotic/amnestic properties of it for exactly that reason, the bronchodialatory effect is just a nice add on.
Then it does not have a hypnotic/amnestic effect. Either it's a dissociative anesthesia or it's a hypnotic/amnestic (think Versed).Ketamine has no sedating property on the central nervous system like morphine or a benzo per-se rather it is a disassociative anaesthetic that (for want of a better description) acts as a NMDA blocker and "disconnects" the limbic system from the higher brain centres (I think the hypothalmus) to produce a state of disassociation rather than one of traditional sedation or GABA-blockade anaesthesia.
Is there a possibility that Ketamine and Fentanyl will take the place of Etomidate and Morphine in the prehospital field?
I think there is. The real danger of etomidate in the critically unwell patient hasn't been fully elucidated. There is no doubt that even a single dose causes a suppresion of the adreno-corticoid axis, but what isn't clear is whether this actually has any clinical effect in the long run. I think there is still a lot of research to be done before we throw away etomidate, however in the meantime, given the choice, I would almost always pick ketamine as my first line agent.
I don't think that it will replace morphine. Morphine is mostly effective, relatively safe and everyone is very comfortable with it due to it's long history. It will certainly augment it however, as it really is a wonderful drug for analgesia in certain settings.