Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

Boys rescued from Thai cave were sedated with ketamine

- By Katie Hunt

Medics who treated the 12 boys and their soccer coach rescued from a cave in Thailand last year credit the drug ketamine with playing a key role in the daring and dangerous mission to extract them.

According to details of the rescue released in a medical journal Thursday, the boys were given unspecifie­d doses of ketamine, also known as party drug Special K, by the rescue divers as they were taken out of Tham Luang cave.

Reports at the time had suggested that the children, who had been trapped for two weeks, were sedated during the operation, but officials gave few details.

"We had to use the means that could keep the children not to be panicky while we were carrying them out," Thai Navy SEAL commander Rear Adm. Arpakorn Yookongkae­w told CNN shortly after the rescue. "Most importantl­y, they are alive and safe."

In a joint letter to the New England Journal of Medicine, three Thai medics and an Australian anesthetis­t who was involved in the rescue said the boys also wore full-face masks supplying oxygen and poorly fitting wetsuits.

They detailed the care the boys received in a field hospital immediatel­y after they left the cave, giving a sense of the perilous nature of the rescue mission.

The first four boys were given sunglasses to protect their eyes because they had not been exposed to the sun for more than two weeks, and their heads and necks immobilize­d in case of spinal injury during the journey through the narrow channels in the cave. Finally, the patients were wrapped in blankets to ward off hypothermi­a.

The letter said the second boy to leave the cave had a body temperatur­e of 35 degrees Celsius ( 95 Fahrenheit) when he came out and developed hypothermi­a on his way to the hospital. Hypothermi­a can cause damage to vital organs, including the heart and kidneys, and the nervous system.

The medics said ketamine was a good choice to give to the boys, given the risk of hypothermi­a, as ketamine impairs shivering and is associated with smaller drops in core body temperatur­e.

Ketamine was first synthesize­d in 1962 and was used by US Army doctors on American soldiers fighting in Vietnam as a painkiller and sedative. However, its minor hallucinog­enic side effects warned doctors off treating people, and it developed a reputation as a street drug known for producing a high similar to an out- of- body experience. It has also been used as a date rape drug.

Today, ketamine is used in pediatric emergency rooms, for example in the case of a fracture, because it's safer than other sedatives, said CNN's Dr. Edith Bracho-Sanchez, a pediatrici­an.

It is also used as a veterinary anesthetic and a close cousin of the drug was recently approved as a treatment for depression. The drug i s on the World Health Organizati­on's Essential Medicine List for adults.

The soccer team entered the cave after going for a bike ride, only to be trapped by rising floodwater­s on June 23. The boys and their coach were found alive more than a week later, deep in the cave network and hundreds of meters below the surface. It was clear that any rescue mission would be fraught with risk. Divers involved in the rescue described the conditions as some of the most extreme they have ever faced.

The decision to rescue the boys was complicate­d by the death of former Thai Navy SEAL Saman Kunan, who ran out of air while returning from an operation to deliver oxygen tanks to the cave.

(Courtesy CNN)

 ?? ?? A screen grab shows boys rescued from the Thai cave wearing mask and resting in a hospital in Chiang Rai, Thailand from a July 11, 2018 handout video. (Government Public Relations Department and Government Spokesman Bureau/Handout via Reuters TV)
A screen grab shows boys rescued from the Thai cave wearing mask and resting in a hospital in Chiang Rai, Thailand from a July 11, 2018 handout video. (Government Public Relations Department and Government Spokesman Bureau/Handout via Reuters TV)

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