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Administration of Nebulised Ketamine for Managing Pain in the Intensive Care Unit of Obstetrics and Gynaecology

DOI: 10.4236/ojanes.2023.135011, PP. 108-117

Keywords: Ketamine, Nebulized, Pain, Postoperative

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Abstract:

Introduction: The use of inhaled ketamine to manage a variety of painful conditions has been endorsed by the American College of Emergency Physicians and the American Academy of Emergency Medicine. Nebulized analgesia has multiple benefits, including rapid, effective and titratable analgesic delivery. The aim of our study is to assess the efficacy and safety of intranasal analgesic-dose ketamine compared to multimodal analgesia in patients presenting with acute postoperative pain or headache after a spinal anaesthetic in the intensive care unit of obstetrics and gynaecology. Materials and Methods: This was a prospective descriptive study, with hospital Ethics Committee approval and written informed consent from study participants. We compared the effect of nebulized ketamine and multimodal analgesia postoperatively in 120 patients belonging to the physical status I - II of the American Society of Anesthesiologists, in the intensive care unit of obstetrics and gynaecology, at the Ibn Rochd University Hospital Center in Casablanca from June 2021 to June 2022. Results: We included 120 patients in our study divided into two groups of 60 patients: the average age was 35 years, with extremes ranging from 18 to 45 years, All patients were hospitalized for postoperative care: all women underwent locoregional anaesthesia with a standard dose according to the service protocol (10 mg of bupivacaine, 25γ of fentanyl, 100γ of morphine), where pain was the common denominator. Among these patients, 59 were admitted for management of postpartum haemorrhage, 43 for postoperative monitoring, 15 for post-spinal anaesthesia headache and 3 for pelviperitonitis. The results of the pain assessment 30 minutes after the ketamine nebulization were marked by a request for analgesia in 12 patients, which is 20% of group A, including 5 patients, whose visual analogue scale (VAS) on admission was between 5 and 7, and 7 patients whose VAS at admission was ≥8; all these patients received a second dose of ketamine by nebulization; the evaluation 30 min after the second dose was marked by a request for analgesia in 4 patients, which is 7% of Group A; in all these patients the VAS at admission was ≥8. Of the total number of patients of Group A, only 4 received morphine when they were requested for analgesia after the second dose of nebulized ketamine. Conclusion: The primary outcome of nebulized ketamine use is a significant reduction in VAS pain score. We believe that nebulized ketamine has a potential effect of reducing pain in the intensive

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