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Ketamine-Induced Sclerosing Cholangitis (KISC) in a Critically Ill Patient With COVID-19.

Sally A I KnooihuizenAriel AdayWilliam M Lee
Published in: Hepatology (Baltimore, Md.) (2021)
Drug-induced (secondary) sclerosing cholangitis has recently been observed with a number of agents (1). Ketamine is a remarkably safe anesthetic, providing sedation and analgesia as adjunct to or substitute for more traditional sedative medications. Although prior reports of recreational ketamine abuse have been associated with findings of secondary sclerosing cholangitis (SSC; 2,3), we report here a novel presentation of the syndrome in association with prolonged ketamine use in the intensive care unit.
Keyphrases
  • drug induced
  • pain management
  • liver injury
  • case report
  • sars cov
  • adverse drug
  • coronavirus disease
  • chronic pain
  • high glucose
  • ultrasound guided
  • diabetic rats
  • oxidative stress
  • acute respiratory distress syndrome