Friday, December 15, 2023

Ketamine in War, including use in TBI patients

Fast-acting, easy to deliver, and respiratory-drive-sparing, ketamine is becoming an increasingly popular solution for pain control and/or sedation in emergency and combat medicine.

Traditional anesthetic and analgesic medications pose several challenges during wartime conditions. Opiates and benzodiazepines come with side effects, such as hypotension and respiratory depression, which can increase patient-management workload.

In 1958, the search for a safer anesthesia agent yielded PCP. However, severe psychological recovery effects quickly ruled out high-dose PCP as an anesthetic (non-schizophrenic patients tended to experience 1-2 days of artificially-induced withdrawal psychosis, while in schizophrenics existing symptoms were profoundly exacerbated).

200 derivatives of PCP underwent further testing. One of these, ketamine, was found to have a short duration of action and produce less stimulant effects than PCP. Ketamine could be delivered by multiple routes (IV, IM, IN) and spared patients' breathing and airway protection reflexes. Ketamine was first synthesized in 1962, and after testing on animals and volunteer prisoners, was approved for use in humans in 1970.

For many decades, concerns over misuse and hallucinogenic side effects discouraged use of ketamine in mainstream medical practice. However, the drug was used with some success in a number of conflicts during the 70's and 80's. Ketamine's first wartime use was by a composite team of UK, French, and US doctors during the 1970 Jordan-PLO civil war. This team used ketamine to sedate children during treatment of burns. IM administration simplified delivery, and having a sedation option with minimal airway impact freed up caregivers in a resource-poor setting. 

Another early use of ketamine was during the Falklands conflict. Fifty burn patients were given ketamine during wound treatment on the Hospital ship Uganda. The patients came in in a wave of 150 casualties, after the bombing of two landing ships.

By the late 90's and early 2000's, research had disproved many misconceptions surrounding
ketamine. Emerging as one of the safest and most versatile battlefield medicines, the drug
saw renewed interest from the US military and from EMS systems. Various US special
operations teams added ketamine to their protocols during the Afghanistan and Iraq wars. In
2012, the US Defense Health Board added ketamine to TCCC protocols as a primary pain
control option (50mg IN or IM, of a 20mg slow IV/IO push). Various military studies from
this period suggest that ketamine administration had either a neutral or protective action against development of PTSD in injured soldiers.

Use of ketamine for pain control is an off-label use; however it seems to be a highly effective alternative to opiates. Ketamine antagonizes NMDA receptors. It interferes with the brain's chemical ability to receive incoming pain stimuli, and at the same time reduces the emotional reaction to pain. Pain control is achieved at a fraction of an anesthesia dose.

Several other factors make ketamine an ideal pain control+ sedation option in EMS,
wilderness medicine, and combat situations. Rather than dropping respiratory drive and
blood pressure, like opiates and benzodiapines ketamine produces hyper-adrenergic effects.
It stimulates the release of dopamine, norepinephrine, and serotonin, and blocks re-uptake of catecholamines. This leads to a slight increase in blood pressure and heartrate. Additional
benefits include a long shelf life, a wide storage temperature tolerance, low cost, good safety profile, ability to administer via IN, IM, IV or IO route, fast action onset, and a variety of dose-dependent effects. Recent studies have dismissed concerns about use of ketamine in TBI patients, showing that the drug does not have a negative impact on cranial perfusion pressure. Ketamine is recommended by the Wilderness Medical Society for use in remote environments, and is on the WHO essential medications list. In resource-poor countries, ketamine is sometimes used as a sole anesthesia agent during surgeries.

Ketamine is general very safe, but some considerations must be taken for patient safety.
Emergence reactions are not uncommon and may include hallucinations, disorientation,
nausea, and anxiety. Keeping the patient in a quiet room with low lighting can help avoid
emergence reactions. Use with caution in combination with other drugs, including sedative
agents, or in patients who have taken street drugs. Ketamine may worsen schizophrenia
symptoms, and may cause hypotension in severely catecholamine-depleted patients.
Although a major benefit of ketamine is its tendency to leave patient respiratory and airway
protective drives intact, patient level of consciousness and breathing should be
carefully monitored, especially with higher doses. This has recently been demonstrated in
the news stories about the death of actor Matthew Perry, and the manslaughter trial of two Aurora, CO paramedics, whose patient died after being given ketamine.



"The_Drug_of_War"--a_historical_review_of_the_use_of_Ketamine_in_military_conflicts 

2014 US military Study: "The intraoperative administration of ketamine to burned U.S. service members does not increase the incidence of post-traumatic stress disorder"  larger retrospective data analysis of ketamine use and PTSD development in 298 burn patients serving in the US military. This study did not find that ketamine offered PTSD-protective effects seen in previous smaller studies, but ketamine also did not worsen likelihood of PTSD development. 
2021 US military study: Ketamine Use in Operation Enduring Freedom - shows increasing usage of ketamine within the US military during the Afghanistan/Iraq campaigns.
2015 Emergency Physicians Monthly article: Battle Tested: Ketamine Proves its Worth on the Front Line

2014 study: The effect of ketamine on intracranial and cerebral perfusion pressure and health outcomes: a systematic review
A review of available literature found that ketamine did not produce significant changes in
cerebral perfusion pressures, neurologic outcomes, length of ICU stay, or mortality.


Thursday, December 14, 2023

Soldier and Civilian Deaths: Comparing Recent Wars to Ukraine

CONFLICTDURATIONESTIMATED MILITARY DEATHS *ESTIMATED CIVILIAN DEATHSAVERAGE CIVILIAN DEATHS / MONTHDEATHS: MIL VS CIVILIANSOURCE
US POST - 9/11 WARS:
AfghanistanOct 2001 - Aug 2021US and Allies: 76,486 Opposition: 52,89346,319195280%Brown University, Watson Institute, https://watson.brown.edu/costsofwar/figures/2021/WarDeathToll
PakistanOct 2001 - Aug 2021US and Allies: 9,518 Opposition: 32,83824,099101176%Brown University, Watson Institute, https://watson.brown.edu/costsofwar/figures/2021/WarDeathToll
IraqMarch 2003 -March 2023US and Allies: 56,925-60,925 Opposition: 36,806 - 43,881186,694 - 210,038784 - 88350%Brown University, Watson Institute, https://watson.brown.edu/costsofwar/figures/2021/WarDeathToll
Syria / ISISSept 2014 - March 2023US and Allies: 62,502 Opposition: 67,065138,9471,34990%Brown University, Watson Institute, https://watson.brown.edu/costsofwar/figures/2021/WarDeathToll
YemenOct 2002 - Aug 2021US and Allies: 2 Opposition: 99,32112,69056780%Brown University, Watson Institute, https://watson.brown.edu/costsofwar/figures/2021/WarDeathToll
GAZAOct 7 2023- Dec 14 2023Israel: 444 Hamas: 600019,8009,00030%Israeli MOD, Gaza Healthy Ministry https://www.aa.com.tr/en/middle-east/gaza-death-toll-tops-18-600-as-israeli-attacks-continue/3081566
UKRAINE: DONBAS WAR6 April 2014 - Jan 2022Ukraine: 4,400 Separatist / Russian: 7,0003,40436330%UN and US State Dept https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Casualties_of_the_Russo-Ukrainian_War#cite_note-OHCHR-8, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Casualties_of_the_Russo-Ukrainian_War#cite_note-russiansoldiers-16
UKRAINE: FULL-SCALE INVASIONFeb 2022 - Sept 2023Ukraine: 70,000 Russia: 120,0009,7014851960%US Estimate https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Casualties_of_the_Russo-Ukrainian_War#cite_note-NYT_August_2023_Estimate-107

Thursday, September 14, 2023

Six Extensively Drug-Resistant Bacteria in an Injured Soldier, Ukraine

From a Research Letter to CDC's Emerging Infectious Diseases, Fall 2023 Issue:

"A man in his mid-50s suffered multiple traumatic injuries after a vehicle fire, including full-thickness burns covering 60% of his total body surface. He was initially treated in a medical facility near Dnipro, Ukraine, before being transferred to a hospital in Kyiv, Ukraine, where healthcare practitioners performed burn wound debridement and escharotomies. Thereafter, the patient was transported to a US military hospital in Germany, where doctors obtained blood, urine, respiratory, and peri-rectal surveillance cultures."

These cultures grew six extensively drug-resistant bacteria: A. baumannii, Enterococcus faecium, Klebsiella pneumoniae, and 3 distinct morphologies of P. aeruginosa. These bacteria were found to be non-susceptible to almost every antibiotic tested against them.

 https://wwwnc.cdc.gov/eid/article/29/8/23-0567_article



Wednesday, September 13, 2023

Notable Trees and Plants of Ukraine


Pines / сосна : 9 species, including: 


Pinus silvestris

European Red Pine

Image by wikipedia


A long, bare, straight trunk, blue-green 1-2” long needles, and orange-red bark which ages to

brown make this tree distinctive. Grows in the poor soil of sandy or rocky areas and peat bogs;

tends to be outcompeted by spruce and broadleaf trees in more fertile soils. It is grown

commercially for pulp and timber.



Pinus mugo 

Mountain Pine

photo by Conifer Kingdom


Found at tree line in the Carpathians and at other high-elevation cold and wet places,

especially north

mountain slopes. A low, shrubby growth habit allows this pine to spring back after

being bent by heavy

snow loads. Useful for erosion control and avalanche breaks



Pinus cembra

Swiss Stone Pine

photo by Wikipedia


This slow-growing 5-needle pine lives at high elevations in the Carpathians

and other European mountain ranges. It produces edible pine nuts.




Fir / ялиця :9 species, including


Abies alba - Silver Fir

Images from Wikipedia


Inhabits the Carpathians mountains, where it grows up to 200’ tall. Ukraine’s

most ecologically and economically important fir. The timber is used for

construction and furniture-making. Bees “milk” aphids to produce an unusual

“fir honey”.




Deciduous Trees


Acer species

Maples / клен


Species include Tatar, Norway, and Sycamore maples.




Quercus robur

Oak / дуб

Image by woodland trust


Widespread on neutral-pH soils across Europe. Acorns tend to be produced every other year

in large quantities.



Fraxinus species

Ash / ясен

Image from Wikipedia


The European Ash is most widespread, and is used in furniture-making and building.

Ashes are members of the Olive tree family.



Tilia species: 

Linden Tree / липа

Image from thespruce.com


In Ukrainian, the month of July is named after this tree’s creamy golden,

sweetly scented flowers, which can be made into tea. The wood is used for

furniture and musical instrument-making.



Carpinus betulus - храб / European Hornbean


Grows at low elevations, often in mixed stands with oak and beech. This

medium-sized tree is useful as an urban street tree, and as firewood.



Fagus sylvatica- бук / European Beech

Images from Wikipedia


Produces shady, old-growth, end-sucession forests. Mature trees help to

nourish saplings in the shady understory, so that new beeches are prepared to

rapidly grow and fill in canopy gaps left by fallen trees.




 

Tuesday, September 12, 2023

Antimicrobial Resistance and the Ukrainian-Russian War

A joint CDC-Ukrainian Ministry of Health study, published on Dec 7 2023, examined rates of multiple-drug-resistant infections in 50 patients who acquired infections in Ukrainians hospitals in late 2022.


60% of these patients were infected by bacteria resistant to carbapenem antibiotics (high-end antimicrobials, generally used as a last resort when all else fails). 


The study also found that 14% of the 354 patients surveyed suffered from hospital-acquired infections. This can be compared to a 2016-17 EU-wide survey of 4,000 patients, which found a healthcare-associated infection rate of 5.5%, and a 6.2^% carbapenem-resistance rate.


"Worldwide, bacterial antimicrobial resistance is estimated to cause more deaths than HIV or malaria and is recognized as a leading global public health threat. In Ukraine, the confluence of high prewar rates of antimicrobial resistance, an increase in the prevalence of traumatic wounds and the war-related strain on health care facilities is leading to increased detection of multidrug-resistant organisms with spread into Europe," the study authors wrote in the Dec. 8 issue of the CDC publication Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report.


Sunday, September 10, 2023

Ukrainian Month Names: a colorful, nature-based calendar

January : Січень (“Sih-chen”)
Named for the tiny, sharp, wind-driven snowflakes that feel like they are
cutting the skin of your face.


February Лютий  (“Lyoo-tiy”)
лютий means “furious”- a reference to the final storms of winter


March Березень
  (“Byer-eh-zyen“)
This is the month when the fresh leaves of spring appear on the березень-birch
trees.


April Квітень
  (“Kvih-ten”)
“Flowers”
 (“Trah-ven”)
“Grass”


May Травень

 (“Trah-ven”)

“Grass”


June Червень
 (“Chyer-ven“)
Named after Porphyrophora polonica, the Polish cochineal scale insect. These bugs were
once common in the sandy soils of Central Europe. The larvae form subterranean
cysts on the roots of host plants, which were harvested in pre-industrial times to
make an economically important reddish-purple dye.


July Липень
 (“Lee-pen”)
When linden trees bloom, producing a ubiquitous lime-honeysuckle scent.


August Серпень
 (“Syer-pen”)
Harvest month- this word means “sickle”, seen in the Soviet hammer and sickle
emblem.


September Вересень
 (“Vyer-eh-sen“)
Named for the purple erica flowers sold in street kiosks in early fall.


October Жовтень
(“Zhyov-ten”)
“Yellow”- for the yellow leaves of autumn.


November Листопад
 (“Listo-pahd“)
“Falling leaves”


December грудень (“Grood-en”)
Named for груда- the small lumps of frozen soil that form
as temperatures fall.