Bioavailability of ketamine after oral or sublingual administration
by
Chong C, Schug S, Page-Sharp M, Ilett K.
Department of Anaesthesia,
Royal Perth Hospital,
Perth, Australia.
Pain Med. 2006 Sep-Oct;7(5):469.


ABSTRACT

Aim: To describe the bioavailability of ketamine after oral or sublingual administration. Methods: This was a randomised cross-over study (10 mg intravenously (i.v.) and 25 mg sublingually or orally) involving six inpatients with neuropathic pain. Written informed consent was obtained. Serial blood samples were taken for drug analysis over an 8 hour period starting just before dose administration. Ketamine and norketamine in plasma were analysed using high performance liquid chromatography. The concentration-time profiles were subjected to noncompartmental analysis, including measurement of the area under the concentration-time curve (AUC(0-8 h)) (TopFit Ver 2.0). Bioavailability was calculated as AUC(0-8 h)/dose(oral or sublingual)x 100/AUC(0-8 h)/dose(i.v.). Group data were compared using a paired t-test (SigmaStat Ver 2.0). Results: The mean +/- SD pharmacokinetic parameters are summarised in the Table. ParameterKetamineNorketaminei.v.SublingualOrali.v.SublingualOralC(max) (mug/l) 156 +/- 16128.6 +/- 6.622.8 +/- 12.8 38 +/- 29 66 +/- 29 82 +/- 34T(max) (h)0.24 +/- 0.290.76 +/- 0.510.96 +/- 0.8 0.6 +/- 0.71.9 +/- 1.0 1.6 +/- 0.9AUC/dose (mug.h/l.mg)13.4 +/- 2.4 4.0 +/- 1.9 3.1 +/- 0.713.0 +/- 6.99.9 +/- 5.312.1 +/- 5.3The bioavailabilies (mean +/- SD) of ketamine after sublingual and oral administration were 32 +/- 17% and 23 +/- 9% respectively. When the contribution from norketamine (as ketamine equivalents) was also included, the combined bioavailabilities increased to 54 +/- 17% and 59 +/- 16% respectively. Conclusion: Both the bioavailability of ketamine alone, and when combined with norketamine was similar after sublingual or oral administration. However, norketamine made a substantial contribution to AUC and the combined bioavailability after both routes. Since norketamine may contribute to analgesic effect of oral ketamine(1), further studies are needed to determine analgesic efficacy of sublingual versus oral ketamine.

Ketamine
Beyond the K-hole
Ketamine: long-term outcomes
Ketamine: medical and non-medical use
The role of ketamine in pain management
Low-dose ketamine as a fast-onset, long-acting antidepressant


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