Rueda Carrillo Luis, Garcia Klepper Alfredo, Yalcin Nilufer, Shah Manan
Neurology, Augusta University Medical College of Georgia, Augusta, USA.
Cureus. 2022 Jul 28;14(7):e27389. doi: 10.7759/cureus.27389. eCollection 2022 Jul.
The quest for a safe and effective anesthetic medication in the mid-20th century led to the discovery of CI-581, which was later named ketamine. Ketamine was labeled a "dissociative anesthetic" due to the state of sensory deprivation that it induces in the subjects receiving it. Although it enjoyed widespread use at the beginning of the Vietnam war, its use rapidly waned due to its psychedelic effect and it became more popular as a recreational drug, and in the field of veterinary medicine. However, as we gained more knowledge about its multiple sites of action, it has reemerged as a useful anesthetic/analgesic agent. In the last decade, the field of neurology has witnessed the growing use of ketamine for the treatment of several neurological conditions including migraine, status epilepticus, stroke, and traumatic brain injury (TBI). Ketamine acts primarily as a non-competitive N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA) receptor antagonist. The binding of ketamine to NMDA receptors leads to decreased frequency and duration of Ca channel opening and thus inhibits glutaminergic transmission. This mechanism has proven to be neuroprotective in several neurological conditions. Ketamine does not increase intracranial pressure (ICP), and it maintains cerebral perfusion pressure (CPP) by increasing cerebral blood flow. Ketamine has also been shown to inhibit massive slow waves of neurological depolarizations called cortical spreading depolarizations (CSD), usually seen during acute neurological injury and are responsible for further neurological deterioration. Unlike other anesthetic agents, ketamine does not cause cardiac or respiratory suppression. All these favorable mechanisms and cerebral/hemodynamic actions have led to increased interest among clinicians and researchers regarding the novel uses of ketamine. This review will focus on the use of ketamine for various neurological indications.
20世纪中叶,人们对安全有效的麻醉药物的探索促成了CI - 581的发现,后来它被命名为氯胺酮。氯胺酮被称为“分离麻醉剂”,因为它会使接受该药物的受试者进入感觉剥夺状态。尽管在越南战争初期它被广泛使用,但由于其致幻作用,其使用迅速减少,后来它作为一种消遣性药物以及在兽医学领域变得更受欢迎。然而,随着我们对其多个作用位点有了更多了解,它又重新成为一种有用的麻醉/镇痛剂。在过去十年中,神经病学领域见证了氯胺酮在治疗多种神经系统疾病(包括偏头痛、癫痫持续状态、中风和创伤性脑损伤(TBI))方面的使用日益增加。氯胺酮主要作为一种非竞争性N - 甲基 - D - 天冬氨酸(NMDA)受体拮抗剂发挥作用。氯胺酮与NMDA受体的结合导致钙通道开放的频率和持续时间降低,从而抑制谷氨酸能传递。这一机制已被证明在多种神经系统疾病中具有神经保护作用。氯胺酮不会增加颅内压(ICP),并且通过增加脑血流量来维持脑灌注压(CPP)。氯胺酮还被证明可以抑制称为皮层扩散性去极化(CSD)的大量神经去极化慢波,这种慢波通常在急性神经损伤期间出现,并会导致进一步的神经功能恶化。与其他麻醉剂不同,氯胺酮不会引起心脏或呼吸抑制。所有这些有利的机制和脑/血流动力学作用使得临床医生和研究人员对氯胺酮的新用途越来越感兴趣。本综述将聚焦于氯胺酮在各种神经适应症中的应用。