Ketamine and other drugs
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Ketamine
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Dissociative agent – causes profound analgesia, immobility, amnesia with light sleep, and feeling of dissociation from one’s own body and surroundings.
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Primarily acts on the cortex. Inhibits glutamate receptor, analgesia partly through opioid receptors. May interfere with glutamate and NMDA receptors.
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Can be given both intravenous and intamuscular
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On anaesthesia some reflexes remain active – cough, pharyngeal etc. hence may not be suitable for surgeries for endosopy or oropharyngeal surgery
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Good for brief operations and repeated use
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Ketamine presented as 5 ml or 10 ml vials (100 mg / ml)
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Stable for 3 years
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Rapid induction (slower than thiopental)
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No drug accumulation
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Rapidly metabolized by liver (metabolite – norketamine – hypnotic - long standing drowsiness and prolonged recoveries in large doses)
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Central stimulation of sympathetic system stimulation of CVS (tachycardia, high BP)
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Large doses direct depression of myocardium
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Produces good analgesia
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Increased muscle tone. So muscle relaxant needed
Problems in Ketamine
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Humans - dreams and hallucinogens
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Cats – maybe thrown to convulsions if subjected to any noise and other disturbances
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Corneal drying due to open eyes – bland ophthalmic ointment in eyes
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Depth of anaesthesia – difficult to judge – inexperienced person may go for more and more amount of the drug
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Combination with alpha-2 agonist – may lead to vomition in some cases
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Popularly ketamine is used in combination with xylazine or xylazine- diazepam in many species for muscle relaxation.
Tiletamine
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More potent, longer acting, greater side effects
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Tiletamine + zolazepam—combination is found to be useful.
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Last modified: Sunday, 27 November 2011, 10:22 AM