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Journal Reading Presented by 江江江 Postoperative Ketamine Administration Decreases Morphine Consumption in Major Abdominal Surgery: A Prospective, Randomized, Double-Blind, Controlled Study

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Postoperative Ketamine Administration Decreases Morphine Consumption in Major Abdominal Surgery: A Prospective, Randomized, Double-Blind, Controlled Study. Journal Reading. Presented by 江易穎. BACKGROUND. acute tolerance after opioid exposure as early as immediate post-op period - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Journal Reading

Journal Reading

Presented by 江易穎

Postoperative Ketamine Administration Decreases Morphine Consumption in

Major Abdominal Surgery: A Prospective, Randomized, Double-Blind, Controlled

Study

Page 2: Journal Reading

BACKGROUND

acute tolerance after opioid exposureas early as immediate post-op period

Acute opioid tolerance: intraoperative remifentanil increases postoperative pain and morphine requirement. Anesthesiology 2000;93:409 –17

Intra-operative remifentanil might influence pain levels in the immediate post-operative period after major abdominal surgery. Acta Anaesthesiol Scand 2005;49:1464–70

Page 3: Journal Reading

BACKGROUND

Tolerance and delayed hyperalgesia from opioid exposure are associated with activation of NMDA receptors in CNS

Dickenson AH. Spinal cord pharmacology of pain. Br J Anaesth1995;75:193–200

Petrenko AB, Yamakura T, Baba H, Shimoji K. The role ofN-methyl-d-aspartate (NMDA) receptors in pain: a review. Anesth Analg 2003;97:1108–16

Woolf CJ, Chong MS. Preemptive analgesia–treating postoperativepain by preventing the establishment of central sensitization. Anesth Analg 1993;77:362–79

Page 4: Journal Reading

BACKGROUND

Ketamine, a NMDA antagonist, prevents experimentally opioid-induced hyperalgesia

ketamine + morphine decreases both pain and morphine consumption postoperatively.

Peri-operative ketamine for acute post-operative pain: a quantitative and qualitative systematic review (Cochrane review). Acta Anaesthesiol Scand 2005;49:1405–28

The influence of timing of systemic ketamine administration on postoperative morphine consumption. J Clin Anesth 2005;17:592–7

Ketamine and postoperative pain–a quantitative systematic review of randomised trials. Pain 2005; 113:61–70

Use and efficacy of low-dose ketamine in the management of acute postoperative pain: a review of current techniques and outcomes. Pain 1999;82: 111–25

Page 5: Journal Reading

BACKGROUND

Low-dose ketamine induces a morphine-sparing effect when this administration is limited to the intra-op period or extended to the post-op period

‘Balanced analgesia’ in the perioperative period: is there a place for ketamine? Pain 2001;92:373–80

A randomised, controlled study of peri-operative low dose- ketamine in combination with postoperative patient-controlled -ketamine and morphine after radical prostatectomy. Anaesthesia 2004;59:222–8

The addition of a small-dose ketamine infusion to tramadol for postoperative analgesia: a double-blinded, placebo-controlled, randomized trial after abdominal surgery. Anesth Analg 2007;104:912–7

Page 6: Journal Reading

BACKGROUND

optimal dosing and duration

abd op: ketamine intra-op +/- post-op 48 h

postoperative morphine-sparing effect, pain reduction, and side effects

Page 7: Journal Reading

METHODS

independent ethics committee approval(No. 99H43, CCPPRB of Amiens University, France)

>18 yrmajor abdominal, urologic, or vascular surgery

Excluded: chronic pain, opioid abuse, psychiatric disorders

signed informed consent from each patient

Page 8: Journal Reading

METHODS

Pre-mx: 1 mg/kg of po hydroxyzine 1 h pre-op Induction: sufentanil 0.5 g/kg, propofol 1.5 mg/kg,

and cisatracurium 0.15 mg/kg Maintained: sufentanil 0.5g/kg/h, desflurane/50%

N2O/O2 and cisatracurium. 1 g of IV paracetamol 30 min before the end of the

surgical procedure. * 48 h (1 g/6 h) PCA only, lockout 7 min. no limit

1 mg/mL of morphine and 2.5mg/50 mL of DHBP *48 h.

In the PACU, if VAS>40, morphine 3 mg IV q5m

Page 9: Journal Reading

METHODS

Prospectively randomized double-blindcomputer-generated opaque envelopes containing the patient number and group assignment.

groups:

(1) PERI: intra-op 0.5mg/kg+2ug/kg/min * 48 h

(2) INTRA: intra-op 0.5 mg/kg + 2ug/kg/min

(3) CTRL: 10 mL N/S + 1mL/h *48 h

Page 10: Journal Reading

METHODS

morphine 50 mg+/-20 in CTRL group / previous data.

40% difference between PERI and CTRL group for an α-risk of 0.05 and a power of 0.90

minimum of 66 patients (22 per group) would be 81 patients (27 per group) Bonferroni correction for post hoc analysis.

Kruskal–Wallis test and Mann–Whitney U-testChi2 with Yates’ correction or Fisher testsP 0.05 was considered significant.

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RESULTS

81 p’t (27 per group) 4 p’t excluded (protocol violation, not

blinded) 77 (27 CTRL, 27 INTRA and 23 PERI)

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RESULTS

0.05

0.01

0.02

0.02

(P 0.003 by repeated measure analysis of variance).

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RESULTS

Post-op 24 h cumulative morphine dose(1) PERI: median 27 mg, interquartile range [19] (2) INTRA: 48 mg [41.5](3) CTRL: 50 mg [21]PERI<INTRA, CTRL (P=0.008)

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RESULTS(P 0.001 by repeated measure analysis of variance)

0.004

0.004

0.0001

0.0001

0.001

0.001

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RESULTS

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DISCUSSION

lower incidence of nausea ketamine reduced PONV

Peri-operative ketamine for acute post-operative pain: a quantitative and qualitative systematic review (Cochrane review). Acta Anaesthesiol Scand

2005;49:1405–28

morphine-sparing effect morphine PCA with DHBP

Page 17: Journal Reading

DISCUSSION

optimal ketamine dosage?

0.5 mg/kg IV + 2 ug/kg/mintheoretical plasma concentration 100 ug/mL no significant signs of accumulation.

7.8 ug/kg/min= psychomimetic effects

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DISCUSSION

0.05

0.01

0.02

0.02

(P 0.003 by repeated measure analysis of variance).

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DISCUSSION(P 0.001 by repeated measure analysis of variance)

0.004

0.004

0.0001

0.0001

0.001

0.001

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DISCUSSION

subanesthetic Ketamine: emotional and behavioral

patient’s performance ≠ pain intensity.

N2O enhance ketamine effect on NMDA

timing of ketamine administration

central sensitization: intra-op and also post-op

Page 21: Journal Reading

CONCLUSIONS

Low-dose ketamine improved postoperative analgesia with a significant decrease of morphine consumption when its administration was continued for 48 h postoperatively, with a lower incidence of nausea and with no side effects of ketamine.