Abstract

Background: Ketamine is increasingly being used as an alternative to opioids in the management of acute pain in the emergency department. In turn, there is increasing research attention to prove the efficacy of ketamine as an analgesic in children presenting in the emergency department. Objective: The first objective of this systematic review was to investigate the effectiveness of ketamine compared to opioid analgesics for pain management in children aged two months to 18 years who have acute pain in the emergency department. The second objective was to compare the adverse events and side effects associated with ketamine with those associated with opioids used for pain management. Methods: A systematic review, using the JBI systematic review was completed. A computerised search from five databases; CINAHL, EMBASE, EMCARE and PubMed, and Cochrane. The included studies were appraised by JBI critical appraisal tool for randomised controlled trials and the study results analysed. Findings: Four randomised control trial studies were included in this systematic review. All the included studies compared ketamine with opioids (morphine and fentanyl) for the management of severe pain in children. The studies were of high methodological quality based on JBI critical appraisal outcome. Meta-analysis was not possible because of the heterogeneity of the studies, especially in terms of different outcome measures, and the approaches (pain assessment tool) used to measure the pain outcomes. The review identified that ketamine demonstrated a non-inferior analgesia effect compared to opioid medication (morphine or fentanyl) as determined by various pain scores used in different studies. However, ketamine use was associated with increased frequency of occurrence of temporary adverse effects that do not require clinical attention. Conclusion: Based on the findings from the review, ketamine is a suitable alternative for opioid analgesics for the management of acute and severe pain in children in ED. The minor transient side effects associated with ketamine should not limit the use of ketamine. Future studies should investigate the appropriate dosage and route of administration of ketamine to be used while managing pain among children with acute and severe pain in the emergency department.

Highlights

  • Ketamine is increasingly becoming an important alternative analgesic to opioids in managing acute and severe pain, especially in children in the emergency department [1]

  • The design was pertinent for gathering and appraisal of evidence presented in the available randomised control trial (RCT) regarding the use of ketamine in pain management compared to opioids among children with severe pain in Emergency Department (ED)

  • This systematic review found that the use of ketamine in the management of severe pain in children in ED is associated with increased frequency of minor, transient, and non-life-threatening side effects compared to opioids, such as morphine and fentanyl [1] [3] [10] [11]

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Ketamine is increasingly becoming an important alternative analgesic to opioids in managing acute and severe pain, especially in children in the emergency department [1]. Objective: The first objective of this systematic review was to investigate the effectiveness of ketamine compared to opioid analgesics for pain management in children aged two months to 18 years who have acute pain in the emergency department. All the included studies compared ketamine with opioids (morphine and fentanyl) for the management of severe pain in children. The review identified that ketamine demonstrated a non-inferior analgesia effect compared to opioid medication (morphine or fentanyl) as determined by various pain scores used in different studies. Ketamine use was associated with increased frequency of occurrence of temporary ad-

Objectives
Methods
Findings
Discussion
Conclusion
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