Publication | Closed Access
NMDA receptor blockade in chronic neuropathic pain: a comparison of ketamine and magnesium chloride
293
Citations
33
References
1996
Year
Chronic Neuropathic PainPain MedicineNeuropathic PainPharmacotherapyPain SyndromeDrug InfusionPain ManagementNeurologyAnalgesicsHealth SciencesPerioperative PainNeuropharmacologyNmda Receptor BlockadePharmacologyPain ResearchMagnesium ChlorideMin Bolus InfusionNeurosciencePain MechanismAnesthesiaMedicineAnesthesiology
Ten patients (4 female, 6 male) aged 34-67 years suffering from peripheral neuropathic pain participated in a double-blind placebo-controlled study where ketamine or magnesium chloride were administered by a 10 min bolus infusion (ketamine: 0.84 mumol/kg = 0.2 mg/kg, magnesium: 0.16 mmol/kg) followed by a continuous infusion (ketamine: 1.3 mumol/kg/h = 0.3 mg/kg/h, magnesium: 0.16 mmol/kg/h). Ongoing pain determined by VAS score, area of touch-evoked allodynia, detection and pain thresholds to mechanical and thermal stimuli were measured before and during drug infusion. Ketamine produced a significant reduction of spontaneous pain (57%) and of the area of allodynia (33%). Magnesium chloride reduced pain (29%) and area of allodynia (18%) insignificantly. Following ketamine there was a significant correlation between the reduction in ongoing pain and reduction in area of touch-evoked allodynia. Detection and pain thresholds to mechanical and thermal stimuli were not significantly changed by the drugs. These findings suggest that both ongoing pain and touch-evoked pain (allodynia) in neuropathic pain are inter-related phenomena, which may be mediated by the same mechanism and involving a N-methyl-D-aspartate receptor.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1