Prehospital Use of Ketamine: Effectiveness in Critically Ill and Injured Patients

Author:

Zietlow John1,Berns Kathy1,Jenkins Donald2,Zietlow Scott1

Affiliation:

1. Mayo Clinic, 200 1st St., Rochester, MN

2. University of Texas, San Antonio, 7703 Floyd Curl Dr., San Antonio, TX

Abstract

Abstract Background The military use of ketamine is well established. The benefits of prehospital civilian use have not been extensively reported. Methods A retrospective review was performed of patients with prehospital ketamine use in Mayo One’s air and critical care ground transport. Results The medical records were reviewed from 2014 to 2016 to assess the efficacy of Ketamine. During this time frame, 158 (167 instances) patients were treated with ketamine for analgesia (38%), sedation (44%), or procedural (18%) use. The patient population had a mean age of 49 (range: 1–100), with 105 (67%) male patients. Indications included trauma (69%), which was further broken down into blunt (57%), penetrating (4%), and miscellaneous (8%), and medical illness (31%). The mean ketamine dose was 52.6 mg (range: 5–200 mg) via intravenous route. Ketamine was utilized in 61% of patients after other medications were ineffective. Overall success rate was 98%. Mean pain scale before and after ketamine use was 9/10 and 3/10, respectively. Ketamine use increased yearly from 21 (13%) in 2014, 56 (36%) in 2015, and 81 (51%) in 2016. Conclusion Prehospital ketamine use is effective alone or in conjunction with other medications for analgesia, sedation, and procedural use in trauma and critically ill patients with minimal hemodynamic and respiratory consequences.

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health,General Medicine

Reference16 articles.

1. The Drug of War – a historical review of the use of Ketamine in military conflicts;Mercer;J R Nav Med Serv,2009

2. Pain following battlefield injury and evacuation: a survey of 110 casualties from the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan;Buckenmaier;Pain Med,2009

3. Ketamine for procedural sedation and analgesia by nonanesthesiologists in the field: a review for military health care providers;Guldner;J Mil Med,2006

4. A triple-option analgesia plan for Tactical Combat Casualty Care: TCCC Guidelines Change 13-04;Butler;J Spec Oper Med,2014

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