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Patient-controlled epidural analgesia with morphine or morphine plus ketamine for post-operative pain relief

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  16 August 2006

P-H. Tan
Affiliation:
Department of Anesthesia, Veterans General Hospital-Kaohsiung, National Yang-Ming University School of Medicine, 386, Ta-Chung 1st Road, Kaohsiung 813, Taiwan, Republic of China
M-C. Kuo
Affiliation:
Department of Anesthesia, Veterans General Hospital-Kaohsiung, National Yang-Ming University School of Medicine, 386, Ta-Chung 1st Road, Kaohsiung 813, Taiwan, Republic of China
P-F. Kao
Affiliation:
Department of Anesthesia, Veterans General Hospital-Kaohsiung, National Yang-Ming University School of Medicine, 386, Ta-Chung 1st Road, Kaohsiung 813, Taiwan, Republic of China
Y-Y. Chia
Affiliation:
Department of Anesthesia, Veterans General Hospital-Kaohsiung, National Yang-Ming University School of Medicine, 386, Ta-Chung 1st Road, Kaohsiung 813, Taiwan, Republic of China
K. Liu
Affiliation:
Department of Anesthesia, Veterans General Hospital-Kaohsiung, National Yang-Ming University School of Medicine, 386, Ta-Chung 1st Road, Kaohsiung 813, Taiwan, Republic of China
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Abstract

Sixty patients were randomly assigned to two equal groups. Group I received epidural morphine 1 mg after surgery and used a patient-controlled analgesia device programmed to deliver morphine 0.2 mg h−1, 0.2 mg per bolus. Group II received an epidural loading dose of morphine 1 mg plus ketamine 5 mg and used a patient-controlled analgesia device programmed to deliver morphine 0.2 mg+ketamine 0.5 mg h−1, morphine 0.2 mg+ketamine 0.5 mg per bolus with a lockout time of 10 min. The mean morphine consumption was 8.6±0.7 mg for group I and 6.2±0.2 mg for group II. Although group II utilized significantly less morphine (P<0.05), pain relief was significantly better in group II than in group I (P<0.05) in the first 3 h. Vomiting occurred more frequently in group I (26%) than in group II (13%). The frequency and severity of pruritus and level of sedation were similar in the two groups. These findings suggest that patient-controlled epidural analgesia with morphine plus ketamine may provide effective analgesia with a lesser dose of morphine and fewer subsequent side effects, compared with patient-controlled epidural analgesia with morphine alone after lower abdominal surgery.

Type
Original Article
Copyright
1999 European Society of Anaesthesiology

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