Revue médicale de Liège
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Synthesized as anesthetic agent about fifty years ago, ketamine (Ketalar) has been supplanted by more attractive anesthetic agents with less adverse effects. Nevertheless, the potential of this drug, although often unknown by many practitioners, remains significant. ⋯ Moreover, its efficacy to treat acute pain resistant to classic analgesics makes ketamine a very interesting and clinically-relevant drug for all practitioners facing this type of pain. This article reviews the clinical benefits of ketamine which has sometimes suffered from a negative reputation, but which possesses recently reconsidered wonderful pharmacological properties.