Comparative safety and efficacy of low dose ketamine and opioids for acute pain management at the emergency department

Background: Pain is a complex phenomenon for which many pharmacological agents have been discovered and utilized for pain relief. Ketamine is a more preferred pain reliever over opioids in the emergency department (ED). The aim of this study was to compare the safety and efficacy of low dose ketamin...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Syed Jehanzeb Asim, Mohammed Aqil, Wajahat Ali, Lal Shehbaz, Shua Nasir
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Advance Educational Institute & Research Centre 2019-12-01
Series:International Journal of Endorsing Health Science Research
Subjects:
Online Access:http://aeirc-edu.com/ojs14/index.php/IJEHSR/article/view/279/537
id doaj-d31740ca587f465289765d2c734e75e0
record_format Article
spelling doaj-d31740ca587f465289765d2c734e75e02020-12-16T10:32:00ZengAdvance Educational Institute & Research Centre International Journal of Endorsing Health Science Research2307-37482310-38412019-12-0174172178https://doi.org/10.29052/JEHSR.v7.i4.2019.172-178Comparative safety and efficacy of low dose ketamine and opioids for acute pain management at the emergency departmentSyed Jehanzeb Asim 0Mohammed Aqil1Wajahat Ali2Lal Shehbaz3Shua Nasir4Department of Emergency Medicine, Dr. Ziauddin Hospital, KarachiDepartment of Emergency Medicine, Dr. Ziauddin Hospital, KarachiDepartment of Emergency Medicine, Dr. Ziauddin Hospital, KarachiDepartment of Emergency Medicine, Dr. Ziauddin Hospital, KarachiDepartment of Emergency Medicine, Dr. Ziauddin Hospital, KarachiBackground: Pain is a complex phenomenon for which many pharmacological agents have been discovered and utilized for pain relief. Ketamine is a more preferred pain reliever over opioids in the emergency department (ED). The aim of this study was to compare the safety and efficacy of low dose ketamine (LDK) with morphine (opioid) for pain relief among patients presenting to the ED. Methodology: A prospective, cohort study was conducted over a sample of 280 patients presented with acute pain to the ED, Ziauddin University Hospital, Karachi. These patients were then divided into two groups via simple random sampling with randomization being assured using an online randomizer software tool. The 1st group (n=140) was given 0.2 mg/kg of LDK while 0.1 mg/kg of intravenous morphine (opioid) was given to the 2nd group (n=140). The pain intensity was measured using the Visual Analogue Scale (VAS) from admission to 60 mins, the records were taken after every 15 mins. The adverse events (AE’s) were also recorded for both groups. The data was then analyzed using SPSS Version 21 & Microsoft Excel 2016. Results: Out of 280 patients enrolled in the study, there was male majority i.e. 76.07% while the remaining were females with the mean age of 29±7 years. Within 15 minutes of initial dose administration in both groups, a marked reduction in pain intensity was observed. Reduced respiratory rate, pruritus and decreased O2 saturation were common AE’s observed, which were comparatively higher among patients receiving morphine as compared to ketamine. Conclusion: The efficacy of morphine (opium) and LDK is similar in alleviating pain in an emergency setting, however, LDK is visibly safer than its opioid counterpart and thus may be used as a safer alternative. http://aeirc-edu.com/ojs14/index.php/IJEHSR/article/view/279/537low dose ketamineopioid analgesicanalgesicacute painoxygen saturation
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Syed Jehanzeb Asim
Mohammed Aqil
Wajahat Ali
Lal Shehbaz
Shua Nasir
spellingShingle Syed Jehanzeb Asim
Mohammed Aqil
Wajahat Ali
Lal Shehbaz
Shua Nasir
Comparative safety and efficacy of low dose ketamine and opioids for acute pain management at the emergency department
International Journal of Endorsing Health Science Research
low dose ketamine
opioid analgesic
analgesic
acute pain
oxygen saturation
author_facet Syed Jehanzeb Asim
Mohammed Aqil
Wajahat Ali
Lal Shehbaz
Shua Nasir
author_sort Syed Jehanzeb Asim
title Comparative safety and efficacy of low dose ketamine and opioids for acute pain management at the emergency department
title_short Comparative safety and efficacy of low dose ketamine and opioids for acute pain management at the emergency department
title_full Comparative safety and efficacy of low dose ketamine and opioids for acute pain management at the emergency department
title_fullStr Comparative safety and efficacy of low dose ketamine and opioids for acute pain management at the emergency department
title_full_unstemmed Comparative safety and efficacy of low dose ketamine and opioids for acute pain management at the emergency department
title_sort comparative safety and efficacy of low dose ketamine and opioids for acute pain management at the emergency department
publisher Advance Educational Institute & Research Centre
series International Journal of Endorsing Health Science Research
issn 2307-3748
2310-3841
publishDate 2019-12-01
description Background: Pain is a complex phenomenon for which many pharmacological agents have been discovered and utilized for pain relief. Ketamine is a more preferred pain reliever over opioids in the emergency department (ED). The aim of this study was to compare the safety and efficacy of low dose ketamine (LDK) with morphine (opioid) for pain relief among patients presenting to the ED. Methodology: A prospective, cohort study was conducted over a sample of 280 patients presented with acute pain to the ED, Ziauddin University Hospital, Karachi. These patients were then divided into two groups via simple random sampling with randomization being assured using an online randomizer software tool. The 1st group (n=140) was given 0.2 mg/kg of LDK while 0.1 mg/kg of intravenous morphine (opioid) was given to the 2nd group (n=140). The pain intensity was measured using the Visual Analogue Scale (VAS) from admission to 60 mins, the records were taken after every 15 mins. The adverse events (AE’s) were also recorded for both groups. The data was then analyzed using SPSS Version 21 & Microsoft Excel 2016. Results: Out of 280 patients enrolled in the study, there was male majority i.e. 76.07% while the remaining were females with the mean age of 29±7 years. Within 15 minutes of initial dose administration in both groups, a marked reduction in pain intensity was observed. Reduced respiratory rate, pruritus and decreased O2 saturation were common AE’s observed, which were comparatively higher among patients receiving morphine as compared to ketamine. Conclusion: The efficacy of morphine (opium) and LDK is similar in alleviating pain in an emergency setting, however, LDK is visibly safer than its opioid counterpart and thus may be used as a safer alternative.
topic low dose ketamine
opioid analgesic
analgesic
acute pain
oxygen saturation
url http://aeirc-edu.com/ojs14/index.php/IJEHSR/article/view/279/537
work_keys_str_mv AT syedjehanzebasim comparativesafetyandefficacyoflowdoseketamineandopioidsforacutepainmanagementattheemergencydepartment
AT mohammedaqil comparativesafetyandefficacyoflowdoseketamineandopioidsforacutepainmanagementattheemergencydepartment
AT wajahatali comparativesafetyandefficacyoflowdoseketamineandopioidsforacutepainmanagementattheemergencydepartment
AT lalshehbaz comparativesafetyandefficacyoflowdoseketamineandopioidsforacutepainmanagementattheemergencydepartment
AT shuanasir comparativesafetyandefficacyoflowdoseketamineandopioidsforacutepainmanagementattheemergencydepartment
_version_ 1724381196899581952