Journal of pain and symptom management
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J Pain Symptom Manage · Feb 2002
Case ReportsLow dose ketamine as an analgesic adjuvant in difficult pain syndromes: a strategy for conversion from parenteral to oral ketamine.
Ketamine is a non-competitive N-methyl D-aspartate (NMDA) receptor antagonist with analgesic and dissociative anesthetic properties. Low dose or sub-anesthetic doses of ketamine have been used effectively as either a primary analgesic or analgesic adjuvant in a variety of pain syndromes. In this paper, three patients with difficult to treat, predominantly neuropathic pain syndromes will be described. ⋯ Subsequently the patients were converted to oral ketamine at doses 30 to 40% of the previous parenteral dose. Their pain syndromes remained controlled on the lower dose of oral ketamine with remarkably few side effects. The implications of this warrant further discussion and study.