You Shuyong, Li Zhaohui
Department of Anesthesiology, Luxian People's Hospital, Luzhou, Sichuan, China.
Department of Anesthesiology, The Second People's Hospital of Luxian County, Luzhou, Sichuan, China.
Front Psychiatry. 2025 Jul 30;16:1594730. doi: 10.3389/fpsyt.2025.1594730. eCollection 2025.
Ketamine, a dissociative anesthetic with N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA) receptor blockade, has become increasingly popular in geriatric anesthesia because of its hemodynamic stability, lack of respiratory depression, and possible neuroprotective properties. Yet, its effect on cognitive function in elderly surgical patients is unknown. Postoperative cognitive dysfunction (POCD) and postoperative delirium (POD) are frequent complications in elderly surgical patients, resulting in longer hospital stays, higher healthcare costs, and long-term cognitive impairment. Although there is some evidence to support ketamine in decreasing neuroinflammation and maintaining cognitive function, others describe high risks of delirium and hallucination, especially at higher doses.
This review assessed the existing literature on ketamine's impact on cognitive outcomes in older anesthesia. A comprehensive review of randomized controlled trials (RCTs was performed, assessing ketamine's potential to prevent or worsen POCD and POD.
Results show that low-dose ketamine (0.3-0.5 mg/kg) is neuroprotective and decreases the rate of cognitive dysfunction in certain patients. Nevertheless, findings continue to be at odds because study design, population of patients, dosing schedules, and measure of cognition may differ. Secondly, the weighting of ketamine's neuroprotective and neurotoxic effects is dose-dependent with larger doses inducing unwanted neuropsychiatric impacts.
In light of these divergent results, additional large-scale, multicenter RCTs are needed to establish optimal dosing regimens and to identify elderly patient subgroups that could be treated safely with ketamine to avoid cognitive complications. Multimodal techniques of anesthesia and long-term cognitive outcomes will also need to be studied in future studies to further delineate ketamine's definitive place in geriatric anesthesia.
氯胺酮是一种具有N-甲基-D-天冬氨酸(NMDA)受体阻滞作用的解离麻醉剂,因其血流动力学稳定性、无呼吸抑制作用以及可能的神经保护特性,在老年麻醉中越来越受欢迎。然而,其对老年外科手术患者认知功能的影响尚不清楚。术后认知功能障碍(POCD)和术后谵妄(POD)是老年外科手术患者常见的并发症,会导致住院时间延长、医疗费用增加以及长期认知障碍。尽管有一些证据支持氯胺酮可减轻神经炎症并维持认知功能,但也有其他研究描述了谵妄和幻觉的高风险,尤其是在高剂量时。
本综述评估了现有关于氯胺酮对老年麻醉中认知结局影响的文献。对随机对照试验(RCT)进行了全面综述,评估氯胺酮预防或加重POCD和POD的可能性。
结果表明,低剂量氯胺酮(0.3 - 0.5 mg/kg)具有神经保护作用,可降低某些患者的认知功能障碍发生率。然而,研究结果仍然存在分歧,因为研究设计、患者群体、给药方案和认知测量方法可能不同。其次,氯胺酮的神经保护和神经毒性作用的权重取决于剂量,较大剂量会引发不良的神经精神影响。
鉴于这些不同的结果,需要进行更多大规模、多中心的随机对照试验,以确定最佳给药方案,并确定可以安全使用氯胺酮治疗以避免认知并发症的老年患者亚组。未来的研究还需要研究麻醉的多模式技术和长期认知结局,以进一步明确氯胺酮在老年麻醉中的明确地位。