Upper-airway collapsibility and compensatory responses under moderate sedation with ketamine, dexmedetomidine, and propofol in healthy volunteers.
Gaku MishimaTakuro SanukiShuntaro SatoMasato KobayashiShinji KurataTerumi AyusePublished in: Physiological reports (2021)
Our findings demonstrate that ketamine sedation may have an advantage of both maintained passive upper-airway collapsibility and a compensatory respiratory response, due to both increase in neuromuscular activity and the increased duty cycle, to acute partial upper-airway obstruction.