CompletedPhase 4ketamine

Low Dose Ketamine as an Adjunct to Opiates for Acute Pain in the Emergency Department

Sponsored by Carilion Clinic

NCT ID
NCT02489630
Target Enrollment
116 participants
Start Date
2013-09
Est. Completion
2015-03

About This Study

This study investigates the use of low doses of ketamine, along with opiate pain medication, is more effective at controlling the acute pain of patients in the emergency department than opiate pain medication alone. In addition, this study examines whether patients treated with low doses of ketamine, along with opiate pain medication, will require less opiate pain medication to control their pain, and whether these patients are equally happy with their pain control as patients who receive only opiate pain medication.

Conditions Studied

Acute PainPain

Interventions

  • Ketamine
  • Normal Saline
  • opiate analgesic

Eligibility

Age:18 Years - 70 Years
Healthy Volunteers:No
View full eligibility criteria
Inclusion Criteria:

* Greater than 18 years but less than 70 years old.
* Exhibiting pain defined on a numerical rating scale (NRS-11 \[Farrar et al. 2001\]) score of equal to or greater than 6 out of 10
* Deemed by the treating EM physician to require opioid analgesia.

Exclusion Criteria:

* Respiratory, hemodynamic or neurologic compromise, as determined by observation of signs of respiratory distress, systolic blood pressure less than 90 mmHg or systolic/diastolic blood pressure greater than 160/90, or a Glasgow -Coma Score less than 15.
* A history of chronic ventilation, dialysis or with previously diagnosed cirrhosis or hepatitis by istory.
* Active psychosis.
* Clinical intoxication.
* Known sensitivity to any study drug.
* An inability to understand the NRS-11 pain measurement scale.
* Presentation with headache or chest pain.
* Pregnancy.
* A lack of decision-making capacity.
* A pain score less than 6 on the NRS-11 scale.
* A concern by the treating physician or study personnel of current or prior history of narcotic abuse, or other secondary gain.
* Previously participated in the study.

This trial is not recruiting

This study has completed enrollment. Check back for results or find similar trials.

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Data Source
ClinicalTrials.gov

Last updated from source