Academic emergency medicine : official journal of the Society for Academic Emergency Medicine

Testing nasal ketamine versus nasal fentanyl for pain relief in children with possible broken arms or legs

Updated

Abstract

Of 629 patients screened, 87 received the study drug and 82 had complete data for the primary outcome.

  • Intranasal ketamine was associated with 2.2 times more cumulative side effects compared to intranasal fentanyl.
  • The most common side effects of ketamine included bad taste in the mouth (90.2%) and dizziness (73.2%).
  • Pain relief at 20 minutes showed a mean score reduction of 44 for ketamine and 35 for fentanyl, indicating similar efficacy.
  • No serious adverse events occurred in either group, and no respiratory side effects were reported.
  • The study supports the feasibility of conducting a larger trial to evaluate the safety and potential benefits of intranasal ketamine.

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