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Last Updated: 3 years ago

Possible Interaction: Ketamine and Potassium

supplement:

Potassium

Research Papers that Mention the Interaction

These results indicate that IV thiamylal and ketamine both suppress the increases of myoglobin, CK, and potassium , and that in cases when succinylcholine is used, both drugs can help to avoid myoglobinemia and limit the increases of CK and potassium. (
Anesthesia and analgesia  •  1995  |  View Paper
The … ketamine was fully antagonized by the potassium channel blockers cesium chloride and barium chloride (8 [26]% and 39 [58%] increase, respectively, P < … was facilitated by the potassium leak channel opener urethane (–93 [8]%, P = 0.002 compared to ketamine control) and low potassium artificial cerebrospinal fluid (–… ketamine control).
Anesthesiology  •  2018  |  View Paper
CONCLUSION Ke amine pr oduces significant inhibition of pot assium cu rrents in the central neurons, which may least partly explain at the action of ketamine.
Beijing da xue xue bao. Yi xue ban = Journal of Peking University. Health sciences  •  2010  |  View Paper
The effect of high potassium could be prevented by Ketamine , but not by APV.
Advances in experimental medicine and biology  •  2000  |  View Paper
Conclusions Although both ketamine and halothane inhibit potassium currents through the Kv2.1 channel, their mechanisms of action at this potential target may be different.
Anesthesiology  •  1996  |  View Paper
Ketamine blocked potassium- and thromboxane A2-stimulated 45Ca uptake in a dose-dependent manner, but had no effect on basal 45Ca uptake, the externally bound 45Ca content, or the volume of the 3H-sorbitol space.
Ketamine produced dose-related relaxation of arteries preconstricted with potassium , a stable thromboxane A2 analogue, or endothelin.
These results indicate that ketamine can directly dilate cerebral arteries by acting as a calcium channel antagonist; ketamine inhibits 45Ca uptake through both potential-operated ( potassium ) and receptor-operated (thromboxane A2) channels in cerebrovascular smooth muscle.
Journal of neurosurgical anesthesiology  •  1994  |  View Paper
Diazepam, propanidid and ketamine induced relaxation and antagonized histamine-, acetylcholine-and potassium chloride-induced contractures in the tracheal smooth muscle.
British journal of anaesthesia  •  1980  |  View Paper
At 10 −3 M , ketamine acted to simultaneously depolarize the postsynaptic membrane and increase the effective membrane resistance by decreasing the membrane conductance to potassium.
Neuropharmacology  •  1976  |  View Paper