Analgesic effect of ketamine in a patient with neuropathic pain

Journal: Tidsskrift For Den Norske Laegeforening : Tidsskrift For Praktisk Medicin, Ny Raekke
Published:
Abstract

We report the effect of a single daily dose of ketamine in a 54 year old woman with fibromyalgia and severe post-traumatic neuropathic pain. A number of different approaches for pain relief had been tried with little effect. An intramuscular test dose of 0.4 mg/kg ketamine combined with 0.05 mg/kg midazolam lead to analgesia which lasted for almost two days. Long-term analgesia was also obtained by 250 mg/kg ketamine hydrochloride taken orally in the form of capsules every night at bedtime. The patient has now used this dose for nine months. Ketamine is an NMDA receptor antagonist. A single sub-anaesthetic dose of ketamine causes a long-term depression of pain intensity in some, but not in all, patients suffering chronic pain. This effect is distinctly different from the short-lasting (10-30 min) analgesic effect in cases of acute nociceptive pain. The long-term depression of the intensity of chronic pain states may be due to a reversal of NMDA receptor-dependent long-term potentiation of synapses in central pain pathways. By giving ketamine as a single dose at night the mental side-effects are reduced or avoided.

Authors
I Oye, T Rabben, T Fagerlund
Relevant Conditions

Fibromyalgia, Neuralgia, Acute Pain