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Hemodynamic Effects of Ketamine in Children with Congenital Heart Disease
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1984
Year
HypertensionHeart FailureCardiac AnaesthesiaPediatric Heart DiseaseKetamine AdministrationCongenital Heart DefectCardiologyCongenital Heart DiseaseSystemic ResistancesPulmonary CirculationCongenital Cardiac RepairPulmonary Arterial HypertensionCardiovascular DiseasePhysiologyPediatricsPulmonary PhysiologyLung MechanicsMedicineCongenital Heart LesionsAnesthesiology
Pulmonary and systemic vascular responses to ketamine (2 mg ยท kgโ1, intravenously) were studied during cardiac catheterization in 20 children with congenital heart lesions. Pulmonary and systemic resistances (Rp, Rs), ratios between pulmonary and systemic flows (๐ฬp/๐ฬs), and left to right (L โ R) and right to left shunts (R โ L) were calculated before and after ketamine administration. Statistically significant (P < 0.05) but clinically minor increases in heart rate (106.8 to 109.9 beats/min), mean pulmonary artery pressure (20.6 to 22.8 mm Hg), and Rp/Rs (0.12 to 0.14) were seen after ketamine. There were no significant changes in systemic arterial pressure, Rs, ๐ฬp/๐ฬs, L โ R, R โ L, or arterial oxygen or carbon dioxide tensions. No patient had any major untoward effects from ketamine administration. It is concluded that the hemodynamic alterations after ketamine administration in children undergoing cardiac catheterization are small and do not alter the clinical status of the patients or the information obtained by cardiac catheterization.