Authors: Mohamed Ahmed Hamed, Mostafa Mohammed Elhamamsy, Ahmed Mohammed Aldemerdash, Walid Saad Taha, Ismail Sayed Aldeab, Mahdy Ahmed Abdelhady, Abeer Shaban Goda, Omar Sayed Fargaly, Rana Ahmed Abdelghaffar, Mohamed Ahmed Shawky, Alyaa Abdel Sattar Mohammed Hassan, Mina Mahrous Sobhy, Mohamed Hasan Ragab, Mohammad Fouad Algyar, Yasser Salem Mostafa.&a
Background: Opioid-sparing sedoanalgesia relies on non-opioid multimodal analgesic and sedative agents. It is being developed to decrease or eliminate opioid use for the management of acute postoperative pain to avoid opioid complications. This study aimed to compare ketamine and dexmedetomidine for their efficiency and safety in inducing opioid-sparing sedoanalgesia in patients following open heart surgery.
Methods: Ninety adult cardiac patients who underwent open heart surgery were enrolled. They were randomly divided into three groups. Group D received a dexmedetomidine infusion of 0.1– 0.2 μg/kg/hour, group K received a ketamine infusion of 1–2 μg/kg/min while group C received a placebo as a control group. Drugs were given after the operation in the surgical intensive care unit. Total postoperative opioid consumption was the primary outcome. Richmond agitation sedation scale, visual analog pain scale, time to first analgesic request, patient satisfaction, and incidence of any complications were recorded.
Results: In this study, we found that the median (interquartile range) postoperative opioid consumption was significantly lower in groups D and K than in group C (156 (40), 140 (83), 185 (110); p < 0.001). Richmond agitation sedation scale was statistically significant until 6 hours postoperative (p-value: < 0.05). Patient satisfaction score was higher in groups D and K than in group C (p-value: 0.005). On the other side, there is no statistically significant difference between the three study groups regarding time to first analgesic request (minutes) (p-value: 0.064) or visual analog pain scale (p-value: > 0.05). Incidence of complications was highly significant between the study groups (p-value: < 0.001).
Conclusions: To decrease postoperative opioid use with their multiple side effects and improve patient satisfaction scores in patients undergoing open heart surgery under general anesthesia, the use of either ketamine or dexmedetomidine is recommended in the postoperative period as an adjuvant modality and a good idea with observation of possibility of some preventable side effects.