Abstract

Chronic pain after major lower back surgery is frequent. We investigated in adults the effect of perioperative low-dose ketamine on neuropathic lower back pain, assessed by the DN4 questionnaire, 6 and 12months after major lower back surgery. In this single-centre randomized trial, 80 patients received intravenous ketamine 0.25mg/kg preoperatively, followed by 0.25mgkg-1 hr-1 intraoperatively, and 0.1mgkg-1 hr-1 from 1hr before the end of surgery until the end of recovery room stay; 80 controls received placebo. Preoperatively, 47.4% of patients in the ketamine group and 46.3% in the placebo group had neuropathic pain; 10% and 3.8%, respectively, were using strong opioids. At the end of the infusion, the median cumulative dose of ketamine was 84.8mg (IQR 67.4-106.7) and the median plasma level was 97ng/ml (IQR 77.9-128.0). At 6months, 28.8% of patients in the ketamine group and 23.5% in the placebo group had neuropathic pain (absolute difference, 5.2%; 95% CI -10.7 to 21.1; p=.607). At 12months, 26.4% of patients in the ketamine group and 17.9% in the placebo group had neuropathic pain (absolute difference 8.5%; 95% CI -6.7 to 23.6; p=.319). In this patient population with a high prevalence of neuropathic lower back pain undergoing major lower back surgery, a perioperative intravenous low-dose ketamine infusion did not have an effect on the prevalence of neuropathic lower back pain at 6 or 12months postoperatively. We were unable to show any analgesic benefit of a short-term perioperative ketamine infusion as an adjuvant to multimodal analgesia in patients with a high prevalence of neuropathic lower back pain undergoing major back surgery. Based on these data, the widespread opinion that ketamine is universally analgesic across different pain conditions must be challenged. Abstract presentation at the annual congress of the Swiss Society of Anaesthesiology, 2016, Basel, Switzerland. Registered by Dr Christoph Czarnetzki as principal investigator on February 20, 2008 at clinicaltrials.gov (NCT00618423).

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call