Institute for Exercise and Environmental Medicine, Texas Health Presbyterian Hospital Dallas and University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center, Dallas, TX, USA.
Department of Applied Clinical Research, University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center, Dallas, TX, USA.
J Physiol. 2021 Jan;599(1):67-81. doi: 10.1113/JP280706. Epub 2020 Oct 20.
Low dose ketamine is a leading medication used to provide analgesia in pre-hospital and hospital settings. Low dose ketamine is increasingly used off-label to treat conditions such as depression. In animals, ketamine stimulates the sympathetic nervous system and increases blood pressure, but these physiological consequences have not been studied in conscious humans. Our data suggest that low dose ketamine administration blunts pain perception and reduces blood pressure, but not muscle sympathetic nerve activity burst frequency, responses during a cold pressor test in healthy humans. These mechanistic, physiological results inform risk-benefit analysis for clinicians administering low dose ketamine in humans.
Low dose ketamine is an effective analgesic medication. However, our knowledge of the effects of ketamine on autonomic cardiovascular regulation is primarily limited to animal experiments. Notably, it is unknown if low dose ketamine influences autonomic cardiovascular responses during painful stimuli in humans. We tested the hypothesis that low dose ketamine blunts perceived pain, and blunts subsequent sympathetic and cardiovascular responses during an experimental noxious stimulus. Twenty-two adults (10F/12M; 27 ± 6 years; 26 ± 3 kg m , mean ± SD) completed this randomized, crossover, placebo-controlled trial during two laboratory visits. During each visit, participants completed cold pressor tests (CPT; hand in ∼0.4°C ice bath for 2 min) pre- and 5 min post-drug administration (20 mg ketamine or saline). We compared pain perception (100 mm visual analogue scale), muscle sympathetic nerve activity (MSNA; microneurography, 12 paired recordings), and beat-to-beat blood pressure (BP; photoplethysmography) during the pre- and post-drug CPTs separately using paired, two-tailed t tests. For the pre-drug CPT, perceived pain (P = 0.4378), MSNA burst frequency responses (P = 0.7375), and mean BP responses (P = 0.6457) were not different between trials. For the post-drug CPT, ketamine compared to placebo administration attenuated perceived pain (P < 0.0001) and mean BP responses (P = 0.0047), but did not attenuate MSNA burst frequency responses (P = 0.3662). Finally, during the post-drug CPT, there was a moderate relation between cardiac output and BP responses after placebo administration (r = 0.53, P = 0.0121), but this relation was effectively absent after ketamine administration (r = -0.12, P = 0.5885). These data suggest that low dose ketamine administration attenuates perceived pain and pressor, but not MSNA burst frequency, responses during a CPT.
小剂量氯胺酮是一种用于提供院前和医院环境下镇痛的主要药物。小剂量氯胺酮越来越多地被用于治疗抑郁症等疾病。在动物中,氯胺酮刺激交感神经系统并增加血压,但这些生理后果尚未在清醒的人类中进行研究。我们的数据表明,小剂量氯胺酮给药可减轻疼痛感知并降低血压,但不会降低冷加压试验期间健康人类的肌肉交感神经活动爆发频率。这些机制和生理学结果为临床医生在人类中使用小剂量氯胺酮提供了风险效益分析。
小剂量氯胺酮是一种有效的镇痛药。然而,我们对氯胺酮对自主心血管调节的影响的了解主要局限于动物实验。值得注意的是,尚不清楚小剂量氯胺酮是否会影响人类在疼痛刺激期间的自主心血管反应。我们假设小剂量氯胺酮可减轻疼痛感知,并减轻冷加压试验期间随后的交感神经和心血管反应。22 名成年人(10 名女性/12 名男性;27±6 岁;26±3kg·m,平均值±标准差)在两次实验室就诊期间完成了这项随机、交叉、安慰剂对照试验。在每次就诊中,参与者在药物给药前(20mg 氯胺酮或生理盐水)和给药后 5 分钟(CPT;手浸入约 0.4°C 的冰水中 2 分钟)进行冷加压试验(CPT)。我们分别使用配对的双侧 t 检验比较了药物前和药物后 CPT 期间的疼痛感知(100mm 视觉模拟量表)、肌肉交感神经活动(微神经记录,12 个配对记录)和每搏血压(光电容积描记术)。对于药物前 CPT,疼痛感知(P=0.4378)、MSNA 爆发频率反应(P=0.7375)和平均 BP 反应(P=0.6457)在试验之间无差异。对于药物后 CPT,与安慰剂相比,氯胺酮给药减轻了疼痛感知(P<0.0001)和平均 BP 反应(P=0.0047),但未减轻 MSNA 爆发频率反应(P=0.3662)。最后,在药物后 CPT 期间,在安慰剂给药后,心输出量与 BP 反应之间存在中度关系(r=0.53,P=0.0121),但在氯胺酮给药后这种关系实际上不存在(r=-0.12,P=0.5885)。这些数据表明,小剂量氯胺酮给药可减轻 CPT 期间的疼痛感知和加压反应,但不会降低 MSNA 爆发频率。