I'm a 19 year Active Army Infantryman. Not 19 years old, been in 19 years. I was wounded on Iraq had my chest crushed pretty bad, lost a rib, lots of nerve damage, yada yada. I was in Walter Reed Army Medical Center for two years. They got me all patched up. However, I struggle with ridiculous pain in the right side of my chest. I even went so far as to have a dorsal root ganglionectomy.
I'm based out of Fort Benning, GA and am currently in Houston, TX where I had the ganglionectomy. My Neurosurgeon, Dr. Ashwin Viswanathon out of Baylor referred me to Houston Pain Associates, Dr. Allen Burton. What a guy! He has run the gauntlet with Cryo, Pulse RF, Blocks, epidurals, etc. Now, I'm on my 12th, 1 hour Ketamine infusion tomorrow.
I realize this forum isnt for an Army Grunt, I just wanted to give you some feedback. So, here it is.
Ketamine SUCKS!!! It is great for pain and with back to back 1 hour infusions can last me weeks, however, the only way it was tolerable was when Dr. Burton administered Versed along with it. The hallucinations and disassociation coupled with having experienced a lot of up close and personal combat, is nothing short of horrifying. Today, even with the Versed, something went nuts. Apparently I tweaked out, my blood pressure shot up and it took them a while to bring me back to earth. The Versed with my wife holding my hand for the entire hour is the only way I stay tethered to earth. Its great for pain but the disassociative properties have to be taken into consideration. PLEASE, give your patients whatever you can so they can sleep through it or something. I think Dr. Burton suggested that he thought I was becoming tolerant to the dosage of Versed. Sometimes, he splits it, gives me half up front then the other, halfway through the infusion. However, tomorrow I think he is going to have to give me more. Its my last infusion as well.
I've had literally everything done for pain management, even have a peripheral neuro stim implant as well. I am also fighting to remain on active duty but I may have to take the medical retirement. We'll see if I can manage with regular scheduled infusions around Fort Benning.
Again, Feel free to hit me up with any questions. I've had ten surgeries relating to this ranging from Walter Reed, to Johns Hopkins to Baylor/St Lukes in Houston. So, if it would help anyone, shoot me an email.
[email protected]
Again, Ketamine is wonderful for pain but the disassociation is horrible during administration. I like the analgesic effects but am horrified of the actual infusions. The only way tolerable is with Versed. Imagine you have a trauma patient that was driving to work and wakes up in an ER on Ketamine. It would be terrifying without something to "ground" him. Is there anything else that could be given safely with it by the way?
Thanks folks. Good luck. Take care of our Servicemembers.
Master Sergeant Todd Landen.