Literature DB >> 11772542

Does ketamine/propofol anesthesia possess antiarrhythmogenic quality? A perioperative study in aortocoronary bypass patients.

W C Hess1, A Ohe.   

Abstract

UNLABELLED: We compared ketamine/propofol (KP) anesthesia with the commonly used high dose fentanyl (F) anesthesia in patients who underwent aortocoronary bypass surgery. The doses of anesthetic drugs and their time schedule of administering was standardized. The study period included the postoperative ICU stay. 31 patients were enrolled (15 in the KP- and 16 in the F-group). The measured and calculated hemodynamic data were intra- and postoperative not statistically different,except the mean and systolic arterial pressure (p = 0.049), which were in the KP-group from the first postoperative hour higher. After separation from bypass the F-patients were more dependent of adrenoreceptor agonists for hemodynamic stabilization than the KP-patients. The postoperative Holter ECG monitoring resulted in following issues: ventricular tachycardias, ventricular salvos and ventricular couplets were significantly less to observe in the KP-group. A difference existed also in the frequency of ventricular extrasystoles, but without statistical significance. No patient fulfilled all criteria for a perioperative myocardial infarction, although in some patients one or two pathologic enzyme value or a pathologic change in the postoperative ECG could be proved. Ketamine resembles in the chemical structure cocaine, therefore it shares with cocaine some effects: inhibiting the neuronal uptake of catecholamines and acting as a sodium-channel blocker. Inhibiting the sodium current is one of the kinds how antiarrhythmic drugs work.
CONCLUSION: The study indicates that the use of ketamine for anesthesia and perioperative sedation coincidences with fewer ventricular rhythm disturbances than with opioid and benzodiazepine as anesthetic and sedation agents.

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Year:  2001        PMID: 11772542

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Eur J Med Res        ISSN: 0949-2321            Impact factor:   2.175


  3 in total

1.  Ketamine attenuates the Na+-dependent Ca2+ overload in rabbit ventricular myocytes in vitro by inhibiting late Na+ and L-type Ca2+ currents.

Authors:  An-tao Luo; Zhen-zhen Cao; Yu Xiang; Shuo Zhang; Chun-ping Qian; Chen Fu; Pei-hua Zhang; Ji-hua Ma
Journal:  Acta Pharmacol Sin       Date:  2015-10-12       Impact factor: 6.150

2.  Prospective study comparing skin impedance with EEG parameters during the induction of anaesthesia with fentanyl and etomidate.

Authors:  Michael Winterhalter; S Münte; M Gerhard; O Danzeisen; T Jüttner; E Monaca; L Hoy; N Rahe-Meyer; P Kienbaum
Journal:  Eur J Med Res       Date:  2010-02-26       Impact factor: 2.175

Review 3.  Ketamine in adult cardiac surgery and the cardiac surgery Intensive Care Unit: an evidence-based clinical review.

Authors:  Michael Mazzeffi; Kyle Johnson; Christopher Paciullo
Journal:  Ann Card Anaesth       Date:  2015 Apr-Jun
  3 in total

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