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- Title
The use of ketamine infusion to dramatically reduce opioid requirements in a patient whose high‐dose intrathecal opioid pump was inadvertently cut during surgery.
- Authors
McDonald, William M.; Wilkinson, Michael M.; Jain, Ankush; Cohen, Steven P.
- Abstract
Background: Chronic opioid therapy may lead to high level tolerance development, hyperalgesia, and central sensitization, which further complicates long‐term therapeutic management of chronic pain patients. In this case, we encounter a patient who was receiving over 15,000 morphine milligram equivalents through their intrathecal pain pump. Unfortunately, the intrathecal pump was inadvertently cut during a spinal surgery. It was deemed unsafe to delivery IV equivalent opioid therapy in this case; instead, the patient was admitted to the ICU and given a four‐day ketamine infusion. Method: The patient was started on a ketamine infusion at a rate of 0.5mg/kg/h, which was continued for three days. On the fourth day, the infusion rate was tapered over 12 h before being completely stopped. No coinciding opioid therapy was given during this time, which was only restarted in the outpatient setting. Results: Despite chronic high levels of opioid therapy immediately prior to the ketamine infusion, the patient did not experience florid withdrawals during the infusion period. Additionally, the patient experienced remarkable improvement in their subjective pain rating, which decreased from 9 to 3–4 on an 11‐point Number Rating Scale, while simultaneously being managed on an MME <100. These results were sustained through a 6‐month follow‐up period. Conclusion: Ketamine may play an important role in attenuating not only tolerance but also acute withdrawal in a setting where rapid or instant weaning from high dose chronic opioid therapy is needed.
- Subjects
SPINAL surgery; CHRONIC pain; MEDICAL equipment reliability; INTRAVENOUS therapy; SPINAL infusions; OPERATIVE surgery; MORPHINE; KETAMINE; DRUG therapy; DRUG utilization; PAIN management; HYPERALGESIA
- Publication
Pain Practice, 2023, Vol 23, Issue 8, p978
- ISSN
1530-7085
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1111/papr.13258