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The Analgesic Efficacy of Ketamine-Magnesium Combination is Influenced by the Order of Medication Administration

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  23 March 2020

K. Savic Vujovic*
Affiliation:
Medical faculty, department of pharmacology, clinical pharmacology and toxicology, faculty of medicine, university of Belgrade, Belgrade, Serbia
S. Vuckovic
Affiliation:
Medical faculty, department of pharmacology, clinical pharmacology and toxicology, faculty of medicine, university of Belgrade, Belgrade, Serbia
A. Vujovic
Affiliation:
Medical faculty, university of Belgrade, hospital for ENT- KBC Dragiša Mišović, Belgrade, Serbia
M. Prostran
Affiliation:
Medical faculty, department of pharmacology, clinical pharmacology and toxicology, faculty of medicine, university of Belgrade, Belgrade, Serbia
*
* Corresponding author.

Abstract

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Introduction

Magnesium is an endogenous voltage-dependent NMDA receptor channel blocker and ketamine is a non-competitive NMDA receptor antagonist. Magnesium may potentiate the effect of ketamine in analgesia and anaesthesia, but may also interact in an opposing manner. This study aimed at evaluating type of the interaction between magnesium sulphate and ketamine administered systemically in rats with an acute nociceptive pain (tail-immersion test).

Materials and methods

Analgesic activity was assessed by tail-immersion test in male Wistar rats (200-250 g). The distal 5 cm of the tail was immersed in a warm water bath (55 ± 0.5 °C) and the time for tail-withdrawal was measured as response latency.

Results

Magnesium sulphate (2.5–30 mg/kg, s.c.) and ketamine (2.5-30 mg/kg, i.p.) administered alone did not produce any effect. However, significant antinociception (synergistic interaction) was revealed at the following doses of ketamine: magnesium sulphate of 5:5 mg/kg, 2.5:5 mg/kg and 10:5 mg/kg. The effect was not dose-dependent, and a greater response was obtained when ketamine was administered before magnesium sulphate.

Conclusions

This study revealed that (1) magnesium sulphate and ketamine given alone were not effective against acute nociceptive pain in rats, but (2) a combination of both drugs resulted in synergistically inhibited nociception, (3) which occurred only at selected low doses and proportions of the medications in a combination and (4) suggested the importance of the order of drug administration.

Disclosure of interest

The authors have not supplied their declaration of competing interest.

Type
EV865
Copyright
Copyright © European Psychiatric Association 2016
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