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Ketamine Potentiates Nondepolarizing Neuromuscular Relaxants in a Primate
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1989
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Neuromuscular CoordinationThumb TwitchMuscle RelaxantsNeurophysiologyMedicinePhysiologyAnesthetic MechanismNeuropharmacologyPharmacotherapyNeuroscienceAnesthesiaPharmacologyConstant Iv InfusionNeuromuscular PhysiologyAnesthetic PharmacologyNeuromuscular BlockadeAnesthesiologyHealth Sciences
Ketamine has many neuromuscular effects in vitro. Its neuromuscular effects in vivo have been controversial and inconsistent. To systematically examine its neuromuscular effects over a wide dose range and its interaction with all popular nondepolarizing neuromuscular relaxants, the effects of ketamine 2, 5, and 10 mg/kg IV were studied on a continuous but incomplete (50%) neuromuscular block preestablished by an IV infusion of d-tubocurarine, atracurium, vecuronium, and pancuronium. Indirectly stimulated adductor pollicis muscle response of monkeys anesthetized with 0.5-1.0% halothane in oxygen were quantified. Ketamine in the absence of a neuromuscular relaxant had no effect on the thumb twitch. In a dose-dependent manner, ketamine significantly enhanced the 50% depression of the thumb twitch preestablished by a constant IV infusion of each of the four muscle relaxants studied. Ketamine 2 mg/kg potentiated the neuromuscular relaxants in the following order of magnitude: vecuronium greater than atracurium greater than d-tubocurarine greater than pancuronium. However, with a 10 mg/kg dose of ketamine, pancuronium became as potentiated as was vecuronium, i.e., pancuronium = vecuronium greater than atracurium greater than d-tubocurarine. It is concluded that in the primate, ketamine potentiates all nondepolarizing muscle relaxants in a dose-dependent manner.