Background: Ketamine is an anaesthetic agent that has both sedative and analgesic properties. Different routes of administrations of ketamine have been found effective for sedation in children undergoing painful invasive procedures. The oral route is gaining popularity for procedural sedation in children. The objectives of the study were to compare the efficacy and safety of oral ketamine 10mg/kg with 15mg/kg for sedation in paediatric oncology patients undergoing lumbar puncture for chemotherapy. Methods: This was a double blind randomized study. Children presenting for intrathecal chemotherapy between 1 and 10 years of age were randomly assigned into 2 groups of either 10mg/kg of oral ketamine or 15 mg/kg, each mixed in a 25% glucose solution. Efficacy was assessed by onset time of maximum sedation and success rate of the sedation while safety was assessed by monitoring changes in heart rate, blood pressure and oxygen saturation. Results: Thirty children (18 with retinoblastoma and 12 with Burkitt lymphoma) were recruited into the study with 15 children assigned into each group. There was no difference in demographic data between the two groups. The mean onset time of maximum sedation was 36.7 ± 3.7 minutes in 15mg/kg compared with 47.1+ 2.8 minutes in the 10mg/kg (p=0.01). Thirteen (86.7%) children were treated with additional IV ketamine in the 10mg/kg group compared with only 3 (20%) in the 15mg/kg group (P= 0.01) in order to achieve the desired sedation. No patient had hypertension or desaturation but tachycardia, nystagmus and hypersalivation were found equally in both groups. Conclusion: Oral ketamine 15mg/kg is a better sedative than 10 mg/kg in children undergoing lumbar puncture for chemotherapy.
Paediatric oncology patients may require lumbar puncture for the administration of chemotherapy. Fears of repeated pain can be stressful and may produces long term psychological trauma in the tender minds of young children.1 A safe, fast and atraumatic premedication can be considered before painful invasive procedures in order to allay anxiety and produce analgesia and amnesia in children.2
An ideal sedative agent for children should be safe, easy to administer, have a rapid and a predictable onset of action, constant efficacy, short duration of action, easy reversibility, with minimal cardiovascular and respiratory effect and produce amnesia and analgesia. It should also lack significant adverse effects and its route of administration should cause no pain.3
The oral route is the physiological route and is the one most preferred by children compared to intramuscular or rectal route.4 Oral midazolam is one of the most commonly used agents for procedural sedation in children used in both in the developing and developed countries.4 It is characterized by fast onset of action, amnesia, muscle relaxation and sedation but lacks analgesic properties. Thus it may not be a sufficient
sedative on its own therefore it is frequently used with opioid or ketamine for procedural pain.4
However, Ketamine is another sedative that is popular mostly in the developing countries for sedation, it is a 2-0-chlorophenyl 2-methylamine cyclohexine hydrochloride, a phencyclidine derivative. It provides sedation and analgesia. The analgesic effect is produced by interacting with multiple binding sites in both peripheral and central nervous systems. These actions are mediated via N methyl D-aspartate (NMDA) and non NMDA receptors.5 Ketamine can be administered by the intravenous, intramuscular and oral routes.
There are increasing reports on safety and efficacy of oral ketamine for painful invasive procedures such as in the repair of laceration in the emergency department,6 in alleviating procedure-related distress in paediatric oncology patients,7 in dental procedures and in dental treatment.8,9
Different doses of oral ketamine have been used solely or in combination with oral midazolam with good response.6,7,8,9 Raman and Deshmukh compared three different doses of oral ketamine, 6mg/kg, 8mg/kg and 10mg/kg for invasive procedures like lumbar puncture, bone marrow aspiration, liver and kidney biopsy.10 Their result showed that ketamine 10mg/kg provided a better sedation and analgesia in children undergoing invasive procedures compared to 6mg/kg and 8mg/kg.10 Amanor – Boadu and Soyannwo compared 5 mg/kg of oral ketamine with 0.5 mg/kg oral midazolam as oral premedication. Although both drugs produced satisfactory sedation in the children without psychic emergence, 50% of the patients with oral ketamine arrived at induction room awake but calm.11
Tobias
Oral ketamine has been used for many procedures but available data using higher oral ketamine dose in Nigeria is sparse. The aim of the study was to assess the efficacy and safety of oral ketamine 10mg/kg compared with 15mg/kg for sedation before lumbar puncture in children undergoing intrathecal chemotherapy.
This was a prospective randomized study on sedation with oral ketamine for children scheduled for intrathecal chemotherapy via lumbar puncture. Ethical approval was obtained from the Ethics Committee of the University of Ibadan/ University College Hospita, Ibadan. All patients scheduled for intrathecal chemotherapy during the study period whose parents gave consent were recruited into the study. The study was carried out in the Paediatric wards of the University College Hospital, Ibadan, Nigeria.
After each child was seen, a history was obtained especially a history of previous allergy to ketamine. Physical examination was then performed including the patient’s weight and fundoscopy to exclude features of raised intracranial pressure. Each child was fasted for 6 hours prior to the procedure.
The children were allocated randomly into 2 groups by a computer generated number; Group A received 10 mg/kg while group B received 15mg/kg. The drug solution was prepared by a senior registrar in the Department of Anaesthesia who was not involved in the study; his job was to mix the injectable ketamine according to the weight of the patient with 5 ml of 25 % glucose solution and hand it over to the investigator. The investigator was blinded to the treatment regimen and another independent person observed each patient for acceptability of the oral preparation, onset of sedation, response to lumbar puncture and any side effects.
Ketamine hydrochloride 50mg/ml injection made by JAWA Pharmaceutical® comes in a colorless liquid solution and 5 ml of 25% glucose was added to make an oral preparation to mask the bitter taste of the drug, which was administered to the patient and when the child was sedated, the parent could then leave. Lumbar puncture was done under aseptic conditions by the paediatrician. After the intrathecal chemotherapy injection, the patient was placed in the left lateral position until awake. Availability of resuscitation drugs like adrenaline, hydrocortisone, chlorpheniramine, diazepam and atropine was ensured. Appropriate size laryngoscope blades, endotracheal tubes, oxygen source, bag and mask for ventilation were also made available.
Oxygen saturation and heart rate were monitored with a pulse oximeter continuously and blood pressure was recorded every 5 minutes until 30 minutes after the procedure was over. The sedation was assessed using the Ramsay sedation score. Ramsay sedation score (RSS) included RSS1: Patient is anxious and agitated or restless or both, RSS 2: Patient is cooperative, oriented and calm, RSS 3: Patient responds to command only, RSS 4: Patient exhibits brisk response to glabella tap or loud auditory stimulus, RSS 5: Patient exhibits sluggish response to glabella tap or loud auditory stimulus, RSS 6. No response. If the sedation score was between 1 and 3, intravenous ketamine of 0.5mg/kg was administered. Atropine 0.02mg/kg (intravenous) was given if there was excessive salivation and diazepam 0.1mg/kg (intravenous) if there was agitation.
Data collected included the demographic data, dose of ketamine, onset of sedation, blood pressure, heart rate, oxygen saturation, presence or absence of hallucination, nystagmus, hypersalivation and abnormal movement.
Data collected was subjected to statistical analysis using the computer based statistical software package SPSS version 20. Mean and standard deviations was computed for continuous variables while Chi - square was performed as appropriate. P value less than 0.05 was considered to be statistically significant.
Thirty children scheduled for lumbar puncture were recruited into the study. Thirteen patients (43.3%) were female while the remaining (56.7%) patients were males. The ages of the children ranged from 2 to 10 years. The age and weight distribution of the cases are shown in Table1, there was no significant difference in the age, weight and sex distribution in the two groups.
Eighteen children (60%) of the study had retinoblastoma while 12 children (40%) had Burkitt lymphoma.
Acceptance of the medication was good in all the patients as no child spat out the drug. The mean time to reach a Ramsay sedation score of 2 was 36.7 ± 3.4 minutes in the 15mg/kg group compared with 47.1+ 2.8 minutes in the 10mg/kg group (p= 0.01). Only 2 (13.3%) children out of 15 had adequate sedation to the administered dosage of 10mg/kg of oral ketamine without intravenous dosage of ketamine to complete the procedure while 12 (80%) children out of 15 had adequate response to the administered dose of 15mg/kg of oral ketamine without intravenous ketamine (p= 0.01, table 2).
Oxygen saturation was well maintained in all patients but nystagmus, hypersalivation and tachycardia were found equally in both groups while 1 patient vomited in the oral ketamine 15mg/kg group and none in oral ketamine 10mg/kg group, (table 3).
This study found that oral ketamine 15 mg/kg was more effective compared with 10mg/kg in children undergoing lumbar puncture for intrathecal chemotherapy. The onset time for maximum sedation was 36 minutes in children with 15 mg/kg oral ketamine compared to 47 minutes in 10 mg/kg oral ketamine. Tobias
This study also showed that the higher dose of 15mg/kg was found to be effective in 80% of patients compared to 13.3 % in 10mg/kg of oral ketamine. Gutstein
A study by Shewale
The documented dose of oral ketamine is in the range of 5-10mg/kg, this dose does not always produce predictable and consistent effect as documented in the literature 14,15 because of low bioavailablity of the oral administration which is about 17-20% with incomplete absorption and extensive first pass metabolism17. This would suggest that higher oral dose at 15mg/kg is effective and gave higher success rate compared to 5-10mg/kg.
Oral ketamine is currently not available in Nigeria; injectable ketamine given orally in a sweetened mixture to mask the bitter taste has been used in various studies, 25% glucose solution was used in this study and all the patients had good acceptance of the drug. Amanor-Boadu and Soyannwo used black currant drink11 while Raman
In our study, we found no cardio-respiratory compromise in both groups. There were no side effects such desaturation, brochospasm or hypertension. However, the side effects observed were increased secretion, nystagmus and tachycardia in both groups similar to other studies10,13. The increased secretion did not require any intervention in this study. Prophylactic anti-sialogogue has been routinely recommended to prevent oral secretion and may presumably cause airway adverse effects18. Rugha
Oral ketamine 15mg/kg provided a faster sedation with minimal side effects compared with oral ketamine 10mg/kg. We therefore recommend the use of oral ketamine 15mg/kg as an effective and safe dose for sedation in invasive procedure such as lumbar puncture in children.