• Anesthesia and analgesia · Jan 2005

    Case Reports

    Is ketamine a safe anesthetic for percutaneous liver biopsy in a liver transplant recipient immunosuppressed with cyclosporine?

    • Anil Agarwal, Mehdi Raza, Sanjay Dhiraaj, Rajan Saxena, Prabhat K Singh, and Ravindra Pandey.
    • Department of Anesthesia, Sanjay Gandhi Post Graduate Institute of of Medical Sciences, Lucknow 226 014, India. aagarwal@sgpgi.ac.in
    • Anesth. Analg. 2005 Jan 1;100(1):85-6.

    AbstractA 6-yr-old male patient underwent live related left lateral segment liver transplant for cryptogenic cirrhosis with portal hypertension. One month after the liver transplant the patient had an isolated liver transaminases increase. He was posted for percutaneous liver biopsy for suspected graft rejection under general anesthesia. The patient was administered ketamine 7 mg/kg along with glycopyrrolate 0.01 mg/kg IM in the preoperative area. He developed generalized tonic clonic seizures just before the biopsy and was treated with IV midazolam 1 mg and thiopental 60 mg. Percutaneous liver biopsy was obtained once the convulsions subsided. Both ketamine and cyclosporine have been implicated as having proconvulsant properties and may have been responsible for the seizures in our patient. Our experience prompted us to suggest that ketamine in a patient immunosuppressed with cyclosporine may not be safe and that alternative anesthetics may need to be considered for such procedures.

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