Ketamine in a dose of 6 mg · kg-1 was nasally administered in 86 healthy children (ASA I and II), aged from two to five years undergoing elective general, urological or plastic surgery, 20 to 40 min before the scheduled surgery time. These children were compared with 62 others, also aged from two to five years, in whom promethazine and meperidine, 1 mg · kg-1 of each, were injected im. Sedation was started as excellent in 48 and as adequate in 19 children in the ketamine group, compared with nine and 12 respectively in Group 2 (P < 0.05), while salivation was similar in both groups. We conclude that nasal ketamine is an alternative to im preanaesthetic sedation administration in children aged from two to five years. © 1993 Canadian Anesthesiologists.
CITATION STYLE
Weksler, N., Ovadia, L., Muati, G., & Stav, A. (1993). Nasal ketamine for paediatric premedication. Canadian Journal of Anaesthesia, 40(2), 119–121. https://doi.org/10.1007/BF03011307
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