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Paediatric anaesthesia · Jun 2011
Exploring the pharmacokinetics of oral ketamine in children undergoing burns procedures.
- Katharine E J Brunette, Brian J Anderson, Jennifer Thomas, Lubbe Wiesner, David W Herd, and Simone Schulein.
- Department of Anaesthesia, Auckland Children's Hospital, Auckland, New Zealand.
- Paediatr Anaesth. 2011 Jun 1;21(6):653-62.
AimsThe aim of this study was to describe ketamine pharmacokinetics when administered orally to children suffering from burn injury in >10% body surface area.MethodsChildren (n = 20) were given ketamine 5 or 10 mg·kg(-1) orally 20 min prior to presentation for surgical procedures. Anesthesia during procedures was maintained with a volatile anesthetic agent. Additional intravenous ketamine was given as a bolus (0.5-1 mg·kg(-1)) to nine children during the procedure while a further nine children were given an infusion (0.1 mg·kg(-1)·h(-1)) continued for 4-19 h after the procedure. Blood was assayed for ketamine and norketamine on six occasions over the study duration of 8-24 h. Data were pooled with those from an earlier analysis (621 observations from 70 subjects). An additional time-concentration profile from an adult given oral ketamine was gleaned from the literature (17 observations). A population analysis was undertaken using nonlinear mixed-effects models.ResultsThe pooled analysis comprised 852 observations from 91 subjects. There were 20 children who presented for procedures related to burns management (age 3.5 sd 2.1 years, range 1-8 years; weight 14.7 sd 4.9 kg, range 7.9-25 kg), and these children contributed 214 ketamine and norketamine observations. A two-compartment (central, peripheral) linear disposition model fitted data better than a one-compartment model. Bioavailability of the oral formulation was 0.45 (90% CI 0.33, 0.58). Absorption half-time was 59 (90% CI 29.4, 109.2) min and had high between-subject variability (BSV 148%). Population parameter estimates, standardized to a 70-kg person, were central volume 21.1 (BSV 47.1%) l·70 kg(-1), peripheral volume of distribution 109 (27.5%) l·70 kg(-1), clearance 81.3 (46.1%) l·h(-1)·70 kg(-1), and inter-compartment clearance 259 (50.1%) l·h(-1)·70 kg(-1). Under the assumption that all ketamine was converted to norketamine, the volume of the metabolite was 151.9 (BSV 39.1%) l·70 kg(-1) with an elimination clearance of 64.4 (BSV 63.4%) l·h(-1) ·70 kg(-1) and a rate constant for intermediate compartments of 26.2 (BSV 52.1%) h(-1)·70 kg(-1).ConclusionsThe ketamine pharmacokinetics in children with minor burns are similar to those without burns. The peak ratio of norketamine/ketamine at 1 h is 2.8 after oral administration allowing an analgesic contribution from the metabolite at this time. There is low relative bioavailability (<0.5) and slow variable absorption. Dose simulation in a child (3.5 years, 15 kg) suggests a dose regimen of oral ketamine 10 mg·kg(-1) followed by intravenous ketamine 1 mg·kg(-1) i.v. with the advent of short-duration surgical dressing change at 45 min.© 2011 Blackwell Publishing Ltd.
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