Changes in vital signs will be recorded every 5 minutes for 30 minutes, then every 10 minutes for 30 minutes
Intra-nasal Ketamine for Analgesia in the Emergency Department
Brief Summary
The provision of analgesia to patients in pain is a fundamental necessity of emergency department practice and is usually accomplished using IV opioids. However, significant barriers exist to the provision of timely analgesia by the IV route.
The use of the IN route for medication delivery provides an efficient and relatively painless mode of analgesia delivery. As well, ketamine is well-known to be an effective analgesic and to preserve cardiorespiratory function thus removing the necessity of physiologic monitoring that is obligatory when using opioids. The use of ketamine by the IN route provides a rapid, easy-administered and well-tolerated method for providing analgesia in the ED setting.
Study Design
Study type: | INTERVENTIONAL |
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Status: | Completed |
Study results: | No Results Available |
Age: | 6 Years and older (Child, Adult, Older Adult) |
Enrollment: | 40 (ACTUAL) |
Funded by: | Other |
Allocation: | N/A |
Primary Purpose: | Treatment |
Masking |
Clinical Trial Dates
Start date: | Oct 01, 2012 | |
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Primary Completion: | Jan 01, 2013 | ACTUAL |
Completion Date: | Jan 01, 2013 | ACTUAL |
Study First Posted: | Sep 17, 2012 | ESTIMATED |
Results First Posted: | Aug 31, 2020 | |
Last Updated: | Feb 03, 2013 |
Sponsors / Collaborators
Lead Sponsor:
Lions Gate Hospital
Responsible Party:
N/A
Participant Groups
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0.5 mg/kg ketamine intra-nasally; then 0.25 mg/kg repeat dose after 10 minutes if necessary
Eligibility Criteria
Sex: | All |
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Minimum Age: | 6 |
Age Groups: | Child / Adult / Older Adult |
Healthy Volunteers: | Yes |
Inclusion Criteria:
* age 6 years or greater
* moderate or severe pain (VAS \>=50mm)
Exclusion Criteria:
* history of allergy or intolerance to ketamine
* structural or functional nasal occlusion
* inability to understand the VAS
* Glasgow Coma Scale \< 15
* Systolic BP \> 180
* History of schizophrenia
* Clinical necessity for immediate IV access as judged by the treating physician
* age 6 years or greater
* moderate or severe pain (VAS \>=50mm)
Exclusion Criteria:
* history of allergy or intolerance to ketamine
* structural or functional nasal occlusion
* inability to understand the VAS
* Glasgow Coma Scale \< 15
* Systolic BP \> 180
* History of schizophrenia
* Clinical necessity for immediate IV access as judged by the treating physician
Primary Outcomes
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Proportion of subjects achieving a 13mm or more reduction in pain as measured on a 100-mm VAS within 30 minutes. 30 minutes
Secondary Outcomes
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Median maximum reduction in VAS pain score achieved within 30 minutes 30 minutes
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Median time required to achieve a 13-mm reduction in VAS pain score 1 hour
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SERSDA (Side Effect Rating Scale for Dissociative Anaesthesia) includes: fatigue, dizziness, nausea, headache, feeling of unreality, changes in hearing, changes in vision, mood change, generalized discomfort, and hallucination.
More Details
NCT Number: | NCT01686009 |
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Acronym: | INKA |
Other IDs: | UBC Dept of EM |
Study URL: | https://clinicaltrials.gov/study/NCT01686009 |
Last updated: Sep 29, 2023