Publication | Closed Access
Racemic Ketamine Decreases Muscle Sympathetic Activity but Maintains the Neural Response to Hypotensive Challenges in Humans
53
Citations
20
References
2000
Year
During increased arterial blood pressure associated with ketamine, sympathetic discharge to muscle blood vessels decreases at the same time that plasma concentrations of norepinephrine increase. When this increase in arterial blood pressure is reversed, MSA during ketamine is not changed from preketamine baseline recordings. Finally, hypotensive challenges still evoke an unchanged sympathetic reflex response. Thus, our results do not support the assumption that ketamine anesthesia increases sympathetic nerve activity in a generalized fashion.
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