Summary:
Objective:To assess if a pre-emptive combination of morphine and ketamine is more effective than if one
drug is administered before surgery and the second one after a surgical stimulation.
Design: Prospective single-blinded randomized clinical study.
Setting:Charles University, Prague, 3rd Medical Faculty, Dept. of Anaesthesiology and Intensive Care.
Material and Method:A total of 63 women scheduled for abdominal hysterectomy were randomly divided
in three equal groups. Only atropine and diazepam were used for premedication. The group K was
administered ketamine 0.6 mg . kg-1 + normal saline (NS) i. v. before induction to general anaesthesia
(GA) and morphine 0.1 mg . kg-1 10 minutes after laparotomy, the group M was administered morphine
0.1 mg.kg-1 + NS before induction to GA and ketamine 0.6 mg . kg-110 minutes after laparotomy and the
group MK was administered ketamine 0.6 mg . kg-1 + morphine 0.1 mg . kg-1 i. v. before induction to GA
and normal saline 10 minutes after laparotomy. GA and monitoring were performed in a standard way.
Post surgery morphine consumption during first and second 24 hours was measured using patient controlled
analgesia.
Results: The morphine consumption during the first 24 hours post surgery was in MK significantly lower
then in M, resp. K (22.6 ± 7 mg vs. 30.2 ± 12.1; P < 0.05, resp. 34.1 ± 12.1; P < 0.001). The morphine consumption
was lower also during the second 24 hours post surgery in MK vs. M resp. K (13.3 ± 5.4 mg vs.
20.1 ± 9 mg, resp. 22.0 ± 10 mg, both P < 0.01). There were no significant differences in morphine consumption
between M and K in any measured interval. There was no case of an insufficient analgesia in any
group.Conclusion: The combination of the pre-emptive ketamine and morphine administration causes better
post-operative analgesia (measured by the morphine consumption after surgery), then when one drug is
used before surgery and the other one after surgical stimulus.
Key words:
pre-emptive analgesia – postoperative analgesia – morphine – ketamine
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