Ketamine
Indications:
Ketamine is recommended for:
Ketamine is a noncompetitive N-methyl-D-aspartate receptor antagonist that blocks glutamate. It has a direct action on the cortex and limbic system. It produces a cataleptic-like state wherein the patient is withdrawn from the surrounding environment.
Dosage & Administration:
Adult:
General Anesthesia-
Rapid sequence Intubation, Induction - 2mg/kg IV
Pediatric:
General Anesthesia:
Administration
Rate of Administration: It is recommended that ketamine should be administered slowly (over a period of 60 seconds). More rapid administration may result in respiratory depression and enhanced pressor response.
The 100 mg/ml concentration of ketamine should not be injected intravenously without proper dilution. It is recommended the drug be diluted with an equal volume of either Sterile Water for Injection, USP, Normal Saline, or 5% Dextrose in Water.
Interaction:
Prolonged recovery time with barbiturates or narcotics. May potentiate neuromuscular blocking effects of atracurium and tubocurarine including resp depression with apnoea. May increase the risk of bradycardia, hypotension, or decreased cardiac output with halogenated anesthetics. May potentiate CNS depression and risk of resp depression with CNS depressants (e.g. phenothiazines, sedating H1-blockers, skeletal muscle relaxants). May antagonize the hypnotic effect of thiopental. May increase the risk of HTN with thyroid hormones. May increase the risk of hypotension with antihypertensive agents. Reduction in seizure threshold resulting in unpredictable extensor-type seizures when given concurrently with theophylline.
Contraindications:
CV disease including severe HTN; patients with increased intraocular or CSF pressure.
Side Effects:
Emergence reactions (e.g. vivid dreams, hallucinations, confusion, irrational behavior); increased muscle tone sometimes resembling seizures; temporary HTN and tachycardia, hypotension, bradycardia, arrhythmias, apnoea, laryngospasm, resp depression, diplopia, nystagmus, nausea, vomiting, lacrimation, hypersalivation, raised intraocular and CSF pressure, transient rash and pain at inj site, cystitis.
Pregnancy & Lactation:
Patient with cardiac decompensation, chronic alcoholic or acutely alcohol-intoxicated patients, pre-Anaesth elevated CSF pressure, globe injuries, increased intraocular pressure (e.g. glaucoma), neurotic traits or psychiatric illness (e.g. schizophrenia, acute psychosis), acute intermittent porphyria, seizures, hyperthyroidism, pulmonary or upper resp infection, intracranial mass lesions, head injury, or hydrocephalus, hypovolaemia, dehydration, cardiac disease esp coronary artery disease (e.g. CHF, myocardial ischemia, MI). Pregnancy and lactation.
Overdose:
Symptoms: Resp depression.
Management: Employ supportive ventilation. Mechanical support of respiration is preferred to admin of analeptics.
Reconstitution:
To prepare a dilute solution containing 1 mg of ketamine per ml, aseptically transfer 10 ml (50 mg per ml vial) to 500 ml of Dextrose Injection, 5% or Sodium Chloride Injection, 0.9% and mix well. The resultant solution will contain 1 mg of ketamine per ml.
Precautions & Warnings:
Store between 20-25° C.
Therapeutic Class: Anesthetic / Critical Care / General (Intravenous) anesthetics
Indications:
Ketamine is recommended for:
- As the sole anesthetic agent for diagnostic and surgical procedures that do not require skeletal muscle relaxation. Ketamine is best suited for short procedures and it can be used with additional doses, for longer procedures.
- For the induction of anesthesia prior to the administration of other general anesthetic agents.
- To supplement low-potency agents, such as nitrous oxide.
Ketamine is a noncompetitive N-methyl-D-aspartate receptor antagonist that blocks glutamate. It has a direct action on the cortex and limbic system. It produces a cataleptic-like state wherein the patient is withdrawn from the surrounding environment.
Dosage & Administration:
Adult:
General Anesthesia-
- IV Induction: 1-4.5 mg/kg single dose
- IM Induction: 6.5-13mg
- IV Infusion: 1-2mg/kg at 0.5mg/kg/min
Rapid sequence Intubation, Induction - 2mg/kg IV
Pediatric:
General Anesthesia:
- IV Induction: 1-2 mg/kg IV; range: 4-13 mg/kg
- IM Induction: 5-10 mg/kg; range: 0.5-4.5 mg/kg
- Maintenance: 0.01-0.03 mg/kg/min continuous IV infusion
Administration
Rate of Administration: It is recommended that ketamine should be administered slowly (over a period of 60 seconds). More rapid administration may result in respiratory depression and enhanced pressor response.
The 100 mg/ml concentration of ketamine should not be injected intravenously without proper dilution. It is recommended the drug be diluted with an equal volume of either Sterile Water for Injection, USP, Normal Saline, or 5% Dextrose in Water.
Interaction:
Prolonged recovery time with barbiturates or narcotics. May potentiate neuromuscular blocking effects of atracurium and tubocurarine including resp depression with apnoea. May increase the risk of bradycardia, hypotension, or decreased cardiac output with halogenated anesthetics. May potentiate CNS depression and risk of resp depression with CNS depressants (e.g. phenothiazines, sedating H1-blockers, skeletal muscle relaxants). May antagonize the hypnotic effect of thiopental. May increase the risk of HTN with thyroid hormones. May increase the risk of hypotension with antihypertensive agents. Reduction in seizure threshold resulting in unpredictable extensor-type seizures when given concurrently with theophylline.
Contraindications:
CV disease including severe HTN; patients with increased intraocular or CSF pressure.
Side Effects:
Emergence reactions (e.g. vivid dreams, hallucinations, confusion, irrational behavior); increased muscle tone sometimes resembling seizures; temporary HTN and tachycardia, hypotension, bradycardia, arrhythmias, apnoea, laryngospasm, resp depression, diplopia, nystagmus, nausea, vomiting, lacrimation, hypersalivation, raised intraocular and CSF pressure, transient rash and pain at inj site, cystitis.
Pregnancy & Lactation:
- Pregnancy: The safe use of ketamine in pregnancy has not been established, and such use is not recommended.
- Lactation: Ketamine is likely to be excreted in breast milk and therefore breastfeeding should be discontinued when ketamine is in use.
Patient with cardiac decompensation, chronic alcoholic or acutely alcohol-intoxicated patients, pre-Anaesth elevated CSF pressure, globe injuries, increased intraocular pressure (e.g. glaucoma), neurotic traits or psychiatric illness (e.g. schizophrenia, acute psychosis), acute intermittent porphyria, seizures, hyperthyroidism, pulmonary or upper resp infection, intracranial mass lesions, head injury, or hydrocephalus, hypovolaemia, dehydration, cardiac disease esp coronary artery disease (e.g. CHF, myocardial ischemia, MI). Pregnancy and lactation.
Overdose:
Symptoms: Resp depression.
Management: Employ supportive ventilation. Mechanical support of respiration is preferred to admin of analeptics.
Reconstitution:
To prepare a dilute solution containing 1 mg of ketamine per ml, aseptically transfer 10 ml (50 mg per ml vial) to 500 ml of Dextrose Injection, 5% or Sodium Chloride Injection, 0.9% and mix well. The resultant solution will contain 1 mg of ketamine per ml.
Precautions & Warnings:
Store between 20-25° C.