Ketamine versus propofol for strabismus surgery in children
Ayse Mizrak1, Ibrahim Erbagci2, Tulin Arici1, Ibrahim Ozcan1, Gurkan Tatar2, Unsal Oner11Anesthesiology and Reanimation, Gaziantep University School of Medicine, Gaziantep, Turkey; 2The Department of Ophthalmology, Gaziantep University School of Medicine, Gaziantep, TurkeyPurpose: To compare the eff...
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Dove Medical Press
2010
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oai:doaj.org-article:3b8f941b0a0a4fc0aaec442326462c9b2021-12-02T09:06:59ZKetamine versus propofol for strabismus surgery in children1177-54671177-5483https://doaj.org/article/3b8f941b0a0a4fc0aaec442326462c9b2010-07-01T00:00:00Zhttp://www.dovepress.com/ketamine-versus-propofol-for-strabismus-surgery-in-children-a4740https://doaj.org/toc/1177-5467https://doaj.org/toc/1177-5483Ayse Mizrak1, Ibrahim Erbagci2, Tulin Arici1, Ibrahim Ozcan1, Gurkan Tatar2, Unsal Oner11Anesthesiology and Reanimation, Gaziantep University School of Medicine, Gaziantep, Turkey; 2The Department of Ophthalmology, Gaziantep University School of Medicine, Gaziantep, TurkeyPurpose: To compare the effects of intravenous infusion of ketamine and propofol anesthesia in children undergoing strabismus surgery. Methods: Sixty pediatric patients aged 4–11 years were enrolled for the study. Patients in Group K were infused ketamine 1–3 mg/kg/hr (n = 30) and patients in Group P were infused with propofol6–9 mg/kg/hr (n = 30). After giving fentanyl 1 µg/kg and rocuronium bromide 0.5 mg/kg, patients were intubated.Results: The consumption of anesthetics (P = 0.0001) and antiemetics (P = 0.004), the incidence of ­oculocardiac reflex (P = 0.02) in Group K were significantly lower than in Group P. The recovery time (P = 0.008), postoperative agitation score (P = 0.005), Face Pain Scale (P = 0.001), Ramsay Sedation Score (P = 0.01) during awakening and at postoperative 30th min (P = 0.02) in Group K were significantly lower than in Group P. The postoperative agitation score ­during awakening was significantly lower than the preoperative values in Group K (P = 0.0001).Conclusions: The infusion of ketamine is more advantageous than the infusion of propofol in children for use in strabismus surgery.Keywords: ketamine, propofol, pediatrics, strabismus, surgery Ayse MizrakIbrahim ErbagciTulin Ariciet alDove Medical PressarticleOphthalmologyRE1-994ENClinical Ophthalmology, Vol 2010, Iss default, Pp 673-679 (2010) |
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Ophthalmology RE1-994 |
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Ophthalmology RE1-994 Ayse Mizrak Ibrahim Erbagci Tulin Arici et al Ketamine versus propofol for strabismus surgery in children |
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Ayse Mizrak1, Ibrahim Erbagci2, Tulin Arici1, Ibrahim Ozcan1, Gurkan Tatar2, Unsal Oner11Anesthesiology and Reanimation, Gaziantep University School of Medicine, Gaziantep, Turkey; 2The Department of Ophthalmology, Gaziantep University School of Medicine, Gaziantep, TurkeyPurpose: To compare the effects of intravenous infusion of ketamine and propofol anesthesia in children undergoing strabismus surgery. Methods: Sixty pediatric patients aged 4–11 years were enrolled for the study. Patients in Group K were infused ketamine 1–3 mg/kg/hr (n = 30) and patients in Group P were infused with propofol6–9 mg/kg/hr (n = 30). After giving fentanyl 1 µg/kg and rocuronium bromide 0.5 mg/kg, patients were intubated.Results: The consumption of anesthetics (P = 0.0001) and antiemetics (P = 0.004), the incidence of ­oculocardiac reflex (P = 0.02) in Group K were significantly lower than in Group P. The recovery time (P = 0.008), postoperative agitation score (P = 0.005), Face Pain Scale (P = 0.001), Ramsay Sedation Score (P = 0.01) during awakening and at postoperative 30th min (P = 0.02) in Group K were significantly lower than in Group P. The postoperative agitation score ­during awakening was significantly lower than the preoperative values in Group K (P = 0.0001).Conclusions: The infusion of ketamine is more advantageous than the infusion of propofol in children for use in strabismus surgery.Keywords: ketamine, propofol, pediatrics, strabismus, surgery |
format |
article |
author |
Ayse Mizrak Ibrahim Erbagci Tulin Arici et al |
author_facet |
Ayse Mizrak Ibrahim Erbagci Tulin Arici et al |
author_sort |
Ayse Mizrak |
title |
Ketamine versus propofol for strabismus surgery in children |
title_short |
Ketamine versus propofol for strabismus surgery in children |
title_full |
Ketamine versus propofol for strabismus surgery in children |
title_fullStr |
Ketamine versus propofol for strabismus surgery in children |
title_full_unstemmed |
Ketamine versus propofol for strabismus surgery in children |
title_sort |
ketamine versus propofol for strabismus surgery in children |
publisher |
Dove Medical Press |
publishDate |
2010 |
url |
https://doaj.org/article/3b8f941b0a0a4fc0aaec442326462c9b |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT aysemizrak ketamineversuspropofolforstrabismussurgeryinchildren AT ibrahimerbagci ketamineversuspropofolforstrabismussurgeryinchildren AT tulinarici ketamineversuspropofolforstrabismussurgeryinchildren AT etal ketamineversuspropofolforstrabismussurgeryinchildren |
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1718398237882187776 |