Post Thoracotomy Pain Clinical Trial
Official title:
Is The Pre-Emptive Administration Of Ketamine A Significant Adjunction To Intravenous Morphine Analgesia For Controlling Post-Operative Pain? A Randomized, Double Blind, Placebo Controlled Clinical Trial.
The goal of this paper is to evaluate whether the pre-emptive administration of Ketamine would potentiate the effect of intravenous morphine analgesia in management of post thoracotomy pain. This was a single center, double-blind, placebo controlled, parallel-group, prospective study. Patients were randomly assigned to receive 1 mg/kg ketamine (Ketamine Group) or an equivalent dose of normal saline (Placebo Group) before thoracotomy in 1:1 ratio. All patients received postoperatively intravenous morphine administration as additional analgesic regimen Primary end-point was pain relief measured with Visual Analogue Scale at rest. The secondary end-points were the reduction of inflammatory response expressed by plasma c-reactive protein levels, the morphine consumption, and the rate of side effects. The measurements were carried out 6; 12; 24; 36; and 48 post operative hours.
Thoracotomy is one of the most painful surgical incision. Inadequate control of pain can have
several detrimental effects, including increased postoperative morbidity and delayed recovery
as well as occurrence of post thoracotomy syndrome. Therefore, choosing an effectiveness
analgesic regimen for thoracic surgery is critical. Many strategies including intercostal
nerve block, intra pleural analgesia, lumbar or thoracic epidural, paravertebral block, intra
venous narcotics, intrathecal or epidural narcotics or trans-cutaneous nerve stimulation have
been used with varied success. However, the ideal strategy remains an open issue. Different
factors including trauma of chest wall, thoracic viscera, diaphragm, and intercostal nerves
concur to thoracotomy pain development. Thus, due to multifactorial genesis of pain following
thoracotomy a multimodal analgesic approach rather than a single method seems to be more
effective because it blocks noxious input at different targets and levels of pain pathways.
Ketamine is an antagonist of N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA) receptor that not only abolishes
peripheral afferent noxious stimulation, but it may also prevent central sensitization of
nociceptors as shown in animal studies. In thoracic surgery, there are contradictory results
on the efficacy of ketamine for controlling pain due to different dose, type of
surgery/patient, and postoperative analgesic regimen used in the various studies. Mathew et
al. in a recent review concluded that adding low-dose ketamine to intravenous morphine
analgesia following thoracotomy was safe and could provide a significant better pain relief
and reduction of morphine consumption compared to placebo. D'Alonzo et al. found that the
administration of a single dose of ketamine prior to chest incision failed to significantly
reduce the pain scores and inflammation in the first 24 post-operative hours. Similarly,
Yazigi et al. reported that pre-emptive intravenous low-dose ketamine followed by continuous
administration during surgery did not decrease acute pain scores and supplemental morphine
consumption. Other studies reported that the epidural infusion of Ketamine before thoracotomy
or during thoracic surgery provides better postoperative analgesia compared to placebo group
or epidural ropivacaine group In the present study, the investigators supposed that the
pre-emptive administration of Ketamine would potentiate the effect of intravenous opioid
analgesia with reduction of pain scores, inflammatory response and morphine consumption
without increasing morbidity in patients undergoing thoracotomy.
This was a single center, double-blind, placebo controlled, parallel-group, prospective
study. Patients were randomly assigned to receive 1 mg/kg ketamine (Ketamine Group) or an
equivalent dose of normal saline (Placebo Group) before thoracotomy in 1:1 ratio. All
patients received postoperatively intravenous morphine administration as additional analgesic
regimen Primary end-point was pain relief measured with Visual Analogue Scale at rest. The
secondary end-points were the reduction of inflammatory response expressed by plasma
c-reactive protein levels, the morphine consumption, and the rate of side effects. The
measurements were carried out 6; 12; 24; 36; and 48 post operative hours.
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