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      History of anaesthesia : The ketamine story – past, present and future

      European Journal of Anaesthesiology
      Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

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          The dissociative anaesthetics, ketamine and phencyclidine, selectively reduce excitation of central mammalian neurones by N-methyl-aspartate.

          The interaction of two dissociative anaesthetics, ketamine and phencyclidine, with the responses of spinal neurones to the electrophoretic administration of amino acids and acetylcholine was studied in decerebrate or pentobarbitone-anaesthetized cats and rats. Both ketamine and phencyclidine selectively blocked excitation by N-methyl-aspartate (NMA) with little effect on excitation by quisqualate and kainate. Ketamine reduced responses to L-aspartate somewhat more than those of L-glutamate; the sensitivity of responses to these two putative transmitters was between that to NMA on one hand and that to quisqualate or kainate on the other. On Renshaw cells, ketamine and phencyclidine reduced responses to acetylcholine less than those to NMA but more than those to quisqualate or kainate. Dorsal root-evoked synaptic excitation of Renshaw cells was reduced to a greater extent than that following ventral root excitation. Intravenous ketamine, 2.5-20 mg/kg, and phencyclidine, 0.2-0.5 mg/kg, also selectively blocked excitation of neurones by NMA. Ketamine showed no consistent or selective effect on inhibition of spinal neurones by electrophoretically administered glycine or gamma-aminobutyricacid (GABA). The results suggest that reduction of synaptic excitation mediated via NMA receptors contributes to the anaesthetic/analgesic properties of these two dissociative anaesthetics.
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            Pharmacologic effects of CI-581, a new dissociative anesthetic, in man

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              Ketamine--its pharmacology and therapeutic uses.

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                European Journal of Anaesthesiology
                European Journal of Anaesthesiology
                Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)
                0265-0215
                2017
                September 2017
                : 34
                : 9
                : 571-575
                Article
                10.1097/EJA.0000000000000638
                28731926
                82e40900-6138-41fe-9790-cd6554c3985f
                © 2017
                History

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