Effectiveness of Ketamine As a Rescue Drug for Patients Experiencing Benzodiazepine-Resistant Status Epilepticus in the Prehospital Setting.

Q4 Medicine Critical care explorations Pub Date : 2024-12-06 eCollection Date: 2024-12-01 DOI:10.1097/CCE.0000000000001186
Kenneth A Scheppke, Paul E Pepe, Sebastian A Garay, Charles W Coyle, Peter M Antevy, Michael C Perlmutter, Eric K Scheppke, Remle P Crowe
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Abstract

Objectives: Accumulating basic science data, early clinical findings and various feasibility considerations have provided rationales for administering ketamine as a proposed rescue medication for midazolam-resistant status epilepticus (SE) in the logistically challenging prehospital environment. This report details the multiyear experience of paramedics managing midazolam-resistant SE following the introduction of a ketamine-rescue protocol.

Design: A 7-year, population-based, observational study was conducted to evaluate outcomes of patients treated with IV, intraosseous, intramuscular, or intranasal ketamine for SE despite sufficient midazolam dosings. Tracked outcomes included: 1) rapid/sustained termination of clinical seizures in adults while under paramedics' care; 2) corresponding evaluations in children/adolescents; 3) any concerning observations regarding need for assisted ventilation, intubation, or other active interventions post-ketamine; and 4) any identifiable associations between outcomes and circumstances, demographics, or medical history.

Setting: Emergency response 9-1-1 system serving a large, diverse U.S. county (jurisdictional population, 961,000/1,769 sq miles).

Patients: Those receiving ketamine from paramedics for persistent seizures.

Interventions: Adults and adolescents: 100 mg ketamine IV/intraosseous/intramuscular/intranasal; children: 1 mg/kg intramuscular/intranasal.

Measurements and main results: Among 81 total cases, 57 involved adults (18-86 yr old) receiving the SE-midazolam + ketamine protocol. Ketamine rapidly terminated convulsions in 56 (98.2%) without recurrence during prehospital and hospital arrival phases. For approved reasons, paramedics administered ketamine directly (no midazolam) in eight adults and one child, terminating convulsions in every case. Among 15 childhood/adolescent cases treated per protocol, ketamine rapidly terminated SE activity in 11, but only mitigated it in four, including two retrospectively judged to involve nonseizure activity and two involving intranasal administration. Among all 81 ketamine-treated cases, there were no identifiable clinically significant complications attributable to ketamine, particularly the need for any additional active interventions.

Conclusions: Ketamine appeared to be consistently effective in treating adults with ongoing out-of-hospital seizures that were resistant to sufficient dosings of midazolam. Similar results were observed in children/adolescents.

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氯胺酮作为院前抗苯二氮卓类癫痫持续状态患者的抢救药物的有效性
目的:积累基础科学数据,早期临床发现和各种可行性考虑为在物流困难的院前环境中将氯胺酮作为抗咪达唑仑癫痫持续状态(SE)的建议救援药物提供了依据。本报告详细介绍了在引入氯胺酮抢救方案后护理人员管理咪达唑仑耐药SE的多年经验。设计:进行了一项为期7年、以人群为基础的观察性研究,以评估静脉注射、骨内注射、肌肉注射或鼻内注射氯胺酮治疗SE患者的结果,尽管咪达唑仑剂量足够。跟踪的结果包括:1)在护理人员护理下,成人临床癫痫发作的快速/持续终止;2)儿童/青少年相应的评价;3)任何有关使用氯胺酮后是否需要辅助通气、插管或其他积极干预的观察;4)结果与环境、人口统计或病史之间任何可识别的关联。环境:紧急响应911系统服务于一个大的,多样化的美国县(管辖人口,961,000/1,769平方英里)。患者:那些从护理人员那里接受氯胺酮治疗持续癫痫发作的患者。干预措施:成人和青少年:100mg氯胺酮IV/骨内/肌肉内/鼻内;儿童:1mg /kg肌内/鼻内。测量方法和主要结果:81例病例中,57例为成人(18-86岁),采用se -咪达唑仑+氯胺酮方案。氯胺酮能迅速终止56例(98.2%)惊厥,在院前和住院期间无复发。出于批准的原因,护理人员对8名成人和1名儿童直接使用氯胺酮(没有咪达唑仑),每个病例都终止了抽搐。在每个方案治疗的15例儿童/青少年病例中,氯胺酮迅速终止了11例SE活性,但仅减轻了4例SE活性,其中2例回顾性判断涉及非癫痫发作活性,2例涉及鼻内给药。在所有81例氯胺酮治疗病例中,没有可确定的氯胺酮引起的临床显著并发症,特别是需要任何额外的积极干预措施。结论:氯胺酮在治疗对足够剂量的咪达唑仑有抵抗力的持续院外癫痫发作的成人中似乎一贯有效。在儿童/青少年中也观察到类似的结果。
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