The purpose of the study is to investigate the effectiveness of low dose IV ketamine infusion in the treatment of patients with PTSD and comorbid chronic pain. Hypothesis: A single ketamine infusion should be associated with significantly greater reduction in core PTSD symptom levels after the treatment and such an effect is not only due to its analgesic properties but also through unknown mechanism of action that maybe related to NMDA/AMPA receptor modulation.
To date, treatment options (i.e. psychotherapy, antidepressant medications) for patients with PTSD, are relatively few, and considering their limited efficacy, novel therapies have gained interest among researchers and treatment providers alike. Among patients with chronic pain about one third suffer from comorbid PTSD, which further complicates their already challenging pharmacological regimens. Low dose ketamine infusion has shown promise in PTSD, and in treatment of chronic pain, however they have not been studied in comorbid population and under rigorous control conditions. The investigators compared the effects of a single dose of either ketamine (0.5 mg/kg) or ketorolac (15 mg) over a 40-minute of IV infusion in chronic pain patients with and without PTSD, in double blind, randomized study. Measures were collected before, during, 1 day and 7 days after the infusion.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
DOUBLE
Enrollment
41
Subjects were randomized into 4 treatment groups: chronic pain subjects treated with ketorolac, chronic pain subjects treated with ketamine, chronic pain+PTSD subjects treated with ketorolac, and chronic pain+PTSD subjects treated with ketamine.
Ann Arbor VA Medical Center
Ann Arbor, Michigan, United States
Impact of Event Scale-Revised (IES-R)
Severity of PTSD symptoms; items are rated on a 5-point scale ranging from 0 ("not at all") to 4 ("extremely"). The IES-R yields a total score (ranging from 0 to 88); higher scores mean worse symptoms
Time frame: 24 hrs post-infusion
Visual Analogue Scale (VAS)
Severity of chronic pain symptoms; using a ruler, the score is determined by measuring the distance (mm) on the 10-cm line between the "no pain" anchor and the patient's mark, providing a range of scores from 0-100; a higher score indicates greater pain intensity.
Time frame: 24 hrs post-infusion
Impact of Event Scale-Revised (IES-R)
Severity of PTSD symptoms; items are rated on a 5-point scale ranging from 0 ("not at all") to 4 ("extremely"). The IES-R yields a total score (ranging from 0 to 88); higher scores mean worse symptoms
Time frame: 1 week post-infusion
Visual Analogue Scale (VAS)
Severity of chronic pain symptoms; using a ruler, the score is determined by measuring the distance (mm) on the 10-cm line between the "no pain" anchor and the patient's mark, providing a range of scores from 0-100; a higher score indicates greater pain intensity.
Time frame: 1 week post-infusion
Brief Pain Inventory (Short Form)
Severity of pain, impact of pain on daily function, location of pain, pain medications and amount of pain relief in the past 24 hours or the past week; No scoring algorithm, but "worst pain" or the arithmetic mean of the four severity items can be used as measures of pain severity (a range of 0-10, with 10 being worse scores); the arithmetic mean of the seven interference items can be used as a measure of pain interference (a range of 0-10, with 10 being worse scores). The total score is reported for severity items and interference items, which range from 0-40 and 0-70, respectively. Higher values represent worse outcome.
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Time frame: 1 week post-infusion