Pain Clinical Trial
Official title:
Nasal Ketamine: Mild Sedation and Analgesia for Minor Procedures in the Pediatric Emergency Department (ED)
Nasal Ketamine has previously been tested in children for deep sedation or preoperative anxiolysis. The investigators intend to test the efficacy of low dose nasal Ketamine in children undergoing minor procedures in the emergency department.
The investigators propose a feasibility study of intranasal ketamine to provide analgesia
and anxiolysis before minor procedures. This will be a single-blinded randomized study of
inhaled ketamine in a convenience sample of children ages 4-12 years of age undergoing minor
procedures. For the purpose of this study, the investigators will limit minor procedures to
venipuncture and IV placement, and will further limit the patient population to children who
are deemed by the investigators to show resistance to IV placement or venipuncture without
premedication. The investigators have chosen the ages 4-12 years because these children are
verbal and able to rate their pain on the VAS scales, because they are likely to require
restraint and to require a staff member to assist parents with restraint, and because the
Green study found this age range to have the fewest adverse events with ketamine.
The investigators propose a uniform dosing of 50 mg/ml intranasal ketamine at 1 mg/kg.
Ketamine will be diluted to achieve volumes between 0.5-1 ml distributed between nares. The
plasma concentration of intranasal ketamine is just over a fifth of IV ketamine, and the
peak serum concentration is reached an average of fifteen minutes later than IV ketamine.
Thus, intranasal administration found to have achieved mild sedation at 1 mg/kg would be
expected to achieve a lower level of sedation than a 0.2 mg/kg slow IV administration, which
is compatible with subdissociative dosing used for analgesia. A 1 mg/kg intranasal dose is
also consistent with the lower end of the dosing spectrum used in the anesthesia literature
for preoperative sedation.
The investigators propose a pilot study of 20 children ages 4-12 years undergoing
venipuncture or IV insertion. After obtaining informed consent from a single parent (the
investigators request exclusion from requiring consent from both parents), the children will
be assigned to receive 1 mg/kg intranasal ketamine via atomizer. Consent will occur after
the treating physician has decided that the child requires bloodwork or IV placement, and
will not impact this decision.
All children will receive EMLA. EMLA cream is the standard of care in our area and we feel
that it would not be ethical to withhold EMLA for the purpose of the study. Ketamine will
add to the incomplete analgesia of EMLA, and may be a better option than EMLA in children
who are known to have difficult venous access. EMLA is not universally effective -- having
been found to decrease VAS pain scores by only 61%-- and causes vasoconstriction, which can
increase the procedural fail rate.
Ketamine will be administered 30 minutes after EMLA is applied. At or about the 45 minute
mark, the procedure will be attempted.
All children will receive continuous monitoring of pulse oximetry, blood pressure and pulse
rate from the time medication is administered until the child is discharged from the
emergency department. All children will be under the direct and continuous observation of ED
staff. The procedure will be completed within twenty minutes of the completion of the nasal
administration.
After the procedure is completed, children will be asked to rate the level of procedural
pain on the Faces scale. A parent and the nurse at the procedure will rate the estimated
procedural pain on the VAS scale. Child, parent as nurse will be blinded to each other's
score.
The investigators intend to show that nasal ketamine requires a minimal disruption in ED
resources and treatment time, effectively treats pain and increases the child's compliance
with venipuncture and IV placement, increases parent satisfaction, and is without serious
adverse events.
;
Endpoint Classification: Safety/Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Single Group Assignment, Masking: Open Label, Primary Purpose: Treatment
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