When it comes to anesthesia viva questions and clinical scenarios in PDCET exams, one drug that repeatedly shows up is ketamine. Not just because of its mechanism, but because of the number of situations where it becomes the agent of choice.
In a recent high-yield session, Dr. Jhanvi Bajaj explained the important clinical uses of ketamine and why anesthesiologists prefer it in emergency and special situations.
What Makes Ketamine Different?
Ketamine produces something known as dissociative anesthesia. This means the patient may appear disconnected from the surroundings while still technically remaining conscious.
Unlike many other anesthetic agents that depress respiration and circulation, ketamine behaves differently — and that is exactly why it becomes extremely important in critical cases.
Watch Video: PDCET SPECIAL: Agent of Choice in Clinical Use Cases | Anesthesia Residency Prep by Dr. Jhanvi Bajaj
Why is Ketamine the Agent of Choice in Shock?
In patients with shock, maintaining blood pressure is crucial.
Most anesthetic drugs tend to lower blood pressure, which can worsen the patient’s condition. Ketamine, however:
- Increases heart rate
- Increases blood pressure
- Maintains hemodynamic stability
Because of this cardiovascular support, ketamine becomes the preferred induction agent in shocked patients.
Why is Ketamine Preferred in Asthma?
One of the biggest advantages of ketamine is its bronchodilator action.
In asthmatic patients, airways are already constricted. Ketamine helps by relaxing the bronchial muscles and improving airflow.
That is why it is considered the agent of choice in bronchial asthma, especially during emergency procedures.
Role of Ketamine in Postpartum Hemorrhage (PPH)
Postpartum hemorrhage is a life-threatening emergency where rapid bleeding control is essential.
Ketamine is useful because it helps in:
- Uterine contraction
- Reducing ongoing bleeding
- Maintaining blood pressure simultaneously
This combination makes it highly valuable in obstetric emergencies.
Why Pediatric Patients Tolerate Ketamine Better?
Children often react strongly to painful IV injections.
Drugs like propofol and etomidate can cause pain during injection, making pediatric induction difficult. Ketamine offers a smoother alternative.
It helps because:
- It does not cause painful induction
- Children tolerate it better
- It allows easier transition to inhalational anesthesia later
This makes anesthesia induction less traumatic for pediatric patients.
Ketamine in Full Stomach Patients & Obstetrics
In full stomach patients, the fear is always aspiration.
Ketamine is preferred because it preserves protective airway reflexes. Even if regurgitation occurs, the airway reflexes remain active and help prevent aspiration into the lungs.
This is particularly useful in:
- Emergency surgeries
- Obstetric anesthesia
- Trauma settings
Why Ketamine is Used in War Zones and Field Anesthesia?
One of the most practical uses of ketamine is in battlefield or trauma settings.
Imagine a patient with severe trauma who requires:
- Pain relief
- Minor procedures
- Suturing or bandaging
Ketamine becomes ideal because:
- It provides strong analgesia
- It maintains spontaneous respiration
- It supports circulation
In places where ventilators and advanced monitoring may not be available, this drug becomes extremely reliable.
Ketamine in Cyanotic Congenital Heart Disease
This is one of the most important conceptual questions for exams.
In cyanotic congenital heart disease, there is usually a right-to-left shunt, meaning deoxygenated blood bypasses the lungs and enters systemic circulation.
Ketamine helps because it:
- Increases systemic vascular resistance (SVR)
- Reduces the right-to-left shunt
- Improves oxygenation
That is why anesthesiologists prefer ketamine in these cardiac patients.
Ketamine for Short Painful Procedures
For quick painful procedures like:
- Dressing changes
- Minor suturing
- Manipulations
- Emergency bedside procedures
Ketamine works extremely well due to its:
- Strong analgesic effect
- Sedation
- Respiratory stability
High-Yield Exam Point to Remember
If a clinical scenario mentions:
- Shock
- Asthma
- Trauma
- Pediatric induction
- Cyanotic heart disease
- Emergency field anesthesia
…ketamine should immediately come to your mind.
These are classic “agent of choice” situations frequently asked in anesthesia entrance exams and residency discussions.
For anesthesia residents and PDCET aspirants, understanding why ketamine is preferred is far more important than simply memorizing the list.
Because once the concept is clear, clinical questions become much easier to solve.
Conclusion:
If you want more high-yield anesthesia discussions like this for PDCET and residency preparation, then Conceptual Anesthesia is the place to be.
From clinically relevant concepts to agent-of-choice discussions, rapid revision sessions, and exam-focused teaching — every session is designed to help residents and aspirants build strong conceptual clarity.
Subscribe to Conceptual Anesthesia and start preparing with expert guidance from experienced faculty who simplify even the most confusing anesthesia topics into easy-to-remember clinical concepts.
Thousands of residents are already learning smarter with Conceptual Anesthesia — now it’s your turn to level up your preparation.
