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Query: UMLS:C0030201 (
Postoperative pain
)
1,085
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Sixty patients undergoing elective total hip replacement under spinal
anaesthesia
were randomly assigned to receive either intrathecal (IT) diamorphine 0.75 mg (n = 30) or IT morphine 1.0 mg (n = 30).
Postoperative pain
scores, analgesic requirements and side effects were assessed by a blinded observer.
Postoperative pain
scores were broadly similar and satisfactory for both groups but the amount of additional IV morphine required to achieve this was significantly reduced in the morphine compared with the diamorphine group (P < 0.05). Twelve of the morphine group required no postoperative analgesics compared with four in the diamorphine group (P < 0.02). There were no differences between the groups in the incidence of side effects such as emesis and pruritus. No significant postoperative respiratory depression was noted. In the doses used intrathecal morphine provided superior postoperative analgesia to that of intrathecal diamorphine.
...
PMID:Postoperative analgesia following total hip replacement: a comparison of intrathecal morphine and diamorphine. 776 97
Postoperative pain
relief and sedation with epidural ketamine were studied. Twenty-four patients for elective upper abdominal surgery were divided into 4 groups. Epidural catheter was inserted into thoracic epidural space before induction of general
anesthesia
. In each group, either 0.25% bupivacaine 5 ml only, ketamine 0.1 mg.kg-1 + bupivacaine 5 ml, or ketamine 0.3 mg.kg-1 + bupivacaine 5 ml, or ketamine 0.5 mg.kg-1 + bupivacaine 5 ml was injected into epidural catheter for complaint of pain in recovery room. In ketamine injected groups, blood pressure and heart were unchanged, but respiration rate increased significantly. Patients in ketamine 0.3 or 0.5 mg.kg-1 injected groups, pain relief and sedation score were significantly intensified, but patients in ketamine 0.5 mg.kg-1 injected group, incidence of pain in the back during injection and headache was high. We conclude that epidural ketamine is useful for postoperative pain relief, and the superior dose of epidural ketamine is 0.3 mg.kg-1.
...
PMID:[Use of ketamine combined with local anesthetics in epidural anesthesia]. 777 28
Vomiting is a common, unpleasant aftermath of tonsillectomy in children. Intraoperative intravenous ondansetron (OND) reduces vomiting after this operation. Our double-blind, placebo-controlled, randomized investigation studied the effect of the oral form of OND on vomiting after outpatient tonsillectomy in children. We studied 233 healthy children age 2-14 yr undergoing elective tonsillectomy. Subjects were given placebo (PLAC) or OND 0.1 mg.kg-1 rounded off to the nearest 2 mg one hr before surgery.
Anaesthesia
was induced with either propofol or halothane/N2O. Vecuronium 0.1 mg.kg-1 was administered at the discretion of the anaesthetist.
Anaesthesia
was maintained with halothane/N2O, 50 micrograms.kg-1 midazolam iv and 1-1.5 mg.kg-1 codeine im. At the end of surgery, residual neuromuscular blockade was reversed with neostigmine and atropine. All episodes of in-hospital emesis were recorded by nursing staff. Rescue antiemetics in the hospital were 1 mg.kg-1 dimenhydrinate iv for vomiting x 2 and 50 micrograms.kg-1 droperidol iv for vomiting x 4. Parents kept a diary of emesis after discharge.
Postoperative pain
was treated with morphine, codeine and/or acetaminophen. The two groups were similar with respect to demographic data, induction technique and
anaesthesia
time. Oral OND (n = 109) reduced postoperative emesis from 54% to 39%, P < 0.05. This effect was most dramatic in-hospital, where 10% of the OND-patients and 30% of the PLAC-group vomited, P < 0.05. The OND-subjects required fewer rescue antiemetics, 7% vs 17%, P < 0.05. In conclusion, oral ondansetron decreased the incidence of vomiting after outpatient tonsillectomy in children.
...
PMID:Oral ondansetron decreases vomiting after tonsillectomy in children. 778 20
A prospective study was conducted to investigate and compare the analgesic effect of morphine and bupivacaine injected intra-articularly following elective knee arthroscopy performed under general
anesthesia
without the use of a tourniquet. Cost-effectiveness of these agents was also evaluated. Patients in Group 1 (n = 41) received 30 cc of 0.25% bupivacaine with 1:200,000 epinephrine; while Group 2 (n = 40) received 2 mg morphine (1 mg/cc) in 28 cc normal saline (total volume 30 cc).
Postoperative pain
scores and the amount of supplemental analgesic agents used in a 24-hour period were recorded. Results showed that patients in Group 2 reported significantly less pain overall (P < .006) and significantly lower analgesic requirements (P < .0004) at a lower average patient cost than Group 1. We conclude that intra-articular morphine reduces postoperative pain and analgesic requirements more effectively and at a lower average patient cost than bupivacaine.
...
PMID:Comparison of intra-articular morphine and bupivacaine following knee arthroscopy. 777 64
After laparoscopic cholecystectomy, carbon dioxide (CO2) must be exhaled after resorption from the abdominal cavity. There is controversy about the amount and relevance of postoperative CO2 resorption. Without continuous postoperative monitoring, after laparoscopic cholecystectomy a certain risk may consist in unnoticed hypercapnia due to CO2 resorption. Studies exist on the course of end-expiratory CO2 (Pe-CO2) alone over a longer postoperative period of time in extubated patients during spontaneous breathing. The goal of this prospective study was to investigate the amount of CO2 resorbed from the abdominal cavity in the postoperative period by means of CO2 metabolism. METHODS. After giving informed consent to the study, which was approved by the local ethics committee, 20 patients underwent laparoscopic cholecystectomy. All patients received general endotracheal
anaesthesia
. After induction, total IV
anaesthesia
was maintained using fentanyl, propofol, and atracurium. Patients were ventilated with oxygen in air (FiO2 0.4). The intra-abdominal pressure during the surgical procedure ranged from 12 to 14 mm Hg. Thirty minutes after releasing the capnoperitoneum (KP), CO2 elimination (VCO2), oxygen uptake (VO2), and respiratory quotient (RQ) were measured every minute for 1 h by indirect calorimetry using the metabolic monitor Deltatrac according to the principle of Canopy. Assuming an unchanged metabolism, the CO2 resorption (delta VCO2) at any given time (t) can be calculated from delta VCO2 (t) = VCO2 (t)-RQ(preop) VO2 (t). It was thus necessary to define the patient's metabolism on the day of operation. The first data were collected before surgery and after introduction of the arterial and venous cannulae for a 15-min period. Measuring point 0 was determined after exsufflation of the KP and emptying of the remaining CO2 via manual compression by the surgeon at the end of surgery. Patient's tracheas were extubated and metabolic monitoring started 30 min after release of the KP for 60 min. Simultaneously, a nasal side-stream capnometry probe was placed and the PeCO2 and respiratory frequency (RF) were obtained by the Capnomac Ultima (Datex) and registered every minute as well. Values were averaged over four periods of 15 min each. An arterial blood gas sample was drawn at the end of every 15-min period.
Postoperative pain
was scored by a visual analog scale and completed by a subjective index questionnaire on general well-being. All data were analysed by the Friedman or Wilcoxon test; P < 0.05 was considered significant. RESULTS. The findings do not indicate CO2 resorption in the postoperative period after laparoscopic cholecystectomy (Tables 2 and 3, Fig. 1). Arterial CO2 as well as PeCO2 were elevated postoperatively (45 mm Hg vs. 36 mm Hg intraoperatively), while VCO2 and VO2 were unchanged when compared to the preoperative measuring period. The postoperative RF was comparable to preoperative values. Calculated delta CO2 was lower than 10 ml/min and within accuracy of measurements. The post-operative pain index ranged between 3 and 4, and 3.75-15 mg piritramid was administered. All patients felt tired immediately after the operation, but scores improved slightly at the end of the 60-min period of metabolic monitoring. CONCLUSIONS. There is no significant resorption of CO2 from the abdominal cavity later than 30 min after releasing the KP. Up to this time, any CO2 remaining in the abdominal cavity after careful emptying by the surgeon has been resorbed and exhaled. An increased PeCO2 as late as 30 to 90 min postoperatively should rather be considered a consequence of residual anaesthetics and narcotics than of CO2 resorption.
...
PMID:[Effect of capnoperitoneum on postoperative carbon dioxide homeostasis]. 784 Mar 99
Postoperative pain
and convalescence following ambulatory inguinal herniotomy in local infiltration
anesthesia
was evaluated in this descriptive study. Sixty consecutive patients (median age 63 yr) were included. Per- and postoperative pain treatment were pre- and postoperative oral tenoxicam and methadone plus infiltration of the surgical field with up to 60 ml of 0.25% bupivacaine. Intraoperative pain intensity was slight and was treated with supplemental bupivacaine. Patients were totally relieved of pain at rest and during mobilisation in the first hours after surgery, but more than half of the patients had moderate pain from the first to the third postoperative day and still had light pain seven days after surgery. Normal daily activity was re-established five days postoperatively (median). Fifty-two patients were satisfied with the
anesthesia
and eight patients not satisfied due to fear of intraoperative pain. This study shows that inguinal herniotomy can be performed routinely as an outpatient procedure under local infiltration
anesthesia
. However, late postoperative pain was significant and should be improved with multi-modal analgesia.
...
PMID:[Pain and convalescence after ambulatory inguinal herniotomy during local anesthesia]. 784 85
Control of postoperative pain is an important element in preventing the modification of the excitability of the dorsal horn neurons. We studied the efficacy of bupivacaine 0.5% wound infiltration for postoperative pain management following thyroid surgery. Forty consecutive ASA I-II patients, scheduled for thyroidectomy, were assigned randomly to two groups. Group I (n = 20) consisted of patients receiving bupivacaine 0.5% (10 ml) wound infiltration at the end of surgery and group II (n = 20 included patients without infiltration. The patients did not know whether the wound had been anaesthetized or not. All patients received balanced inhalational
anaesthesia
, including fentanyl (a total dose of up to 4 micrograms.kg-1).
Postoperative pain
medication included morphine IV or IM, as needed. Twenty-four hours after surgery the worst pain was recorded using a visual analogue scoring system, from 0 to 10. Twenty-four hour postoperative morphine requirement was recorded. Groups did not differ in demographic data. Pain scores significantly different in the two groups. In group I, the mean pain score was 3.7 +/- 1.6 compared with 6.9 +/- 1.7 in group II (P < 0.05). Only six patients (30%) in group I received opioids and only one of these (5%) had a pain score above 5. In comparison, 18 patients (90%) in group II received morphine during the first postoperative day. The local injection of bupivacaine corresponds to a block of the superficial branches of the cervical plexus. This study demonstrated a simple, efficient and safe way to reduce pain perception following a thyroidectomy.
...
PMID:Bupivacaine wound infiltration in thyroid surgery reduces postoperative pain and opioid demand. 788 3
Two hundred and fifty children undergoing herniotomy or orchidopexy under general
anaesthesia
were randomly allocated to receive pre-operatively either diclofenac sodium 1 mg.kg-1 given intramuscularly or a caudal injection of bupivacaine 0.25% 1 ml.kg-1 with or without adrenaline or no analgesia. Plasma diclofenac and beta-endorphin concentrations were determined in eight and 21 patients respectively.
Postoperative pain
was assessed by ward nurses who were blinded to the group allocation. Comparison with the control group showed diclofenac to be an effective analgesic. Caudal bupivacaine provided more pain-free children during the early postoperative hours, but later the need for pethidine as rescue analgesic was lower among the children who had received intramuscular diclofenac. Caudal analgesia abolished the stress-induced increase in plasma beta-endorphin level which was found in the children given diclofenac and in those who served as controls. Total plasma clearance of intramuscular diclofenac sodium appears to be higher in children than in adults. A single intramuscular dose of diclofenac significantly reduces the need for an opioid analgesic in children after inguinal herniotomy or orchidopexy, and owing to its long duration of action, it offers an alternative or complementary method of pain relief to caudal analgesia.
Anaesthesia
1994 Jan
PMID:Postoperative pain relief in children. A comparison between caudal bupivacaine and intramuscular diclofenac sodium. 790 4
Ketorolac is one of the newer non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) that appears to have significant analgesic properties. The purpose of this study was to determine whether ketorolac would provide adequate postoperative analgesia following laparoscopic sterilization and whether it would impact the incidence of nausea and vomiting. Patients were assigned randomly, in double-blind fashion, to receive either ketorolac 30 mg or saline by intramuscular injection immediately following induction of
anaesthesia
. All patients received fentanyl 100 mcg, a sleep-inducing dose of propofol, either atracurium or vecuronium, oxygen, nitrous oxide, isoflurane, atropine 1.2 mg, and neostigmine 2.5 mg. Surgery consisted of applying Hulka clips to the fallopian tubes.
Postoperative pain
was assessed using a visual analogue score (VAS) on 3 separate occasions in recovery. Patients received analgesia using a standard intravenous fentanyl, morphine or pethidine protocol if required. There was no significant difference between the 2 groups with respect to age, weight or procedure duration. Assessment of pain using the VAS slightly, but not significantly, favored the ketorolac group when patients were assessed prior to leaving the first stage recovery and prior to discharge. The worst pain scores recorded prior to discharge were similar in the 2 groups. On all occasions, there was an extremely wide range of scores in both groups. The mean opioid requirement in terms of pethidine equivalents was 23.5 mg in the ketorolac group and 35.5 mg in the saline group. This difference, however, is not statistically significant. Nausea occurred in 50% of ketorolac and 60% of saline groups, while vomiting ensued in 25% of ketorolac and 35% of saline patients. Anti-emetic use was similar in both groups (ketorolac 35%, saline 45%). A large study involving more than 186 patients would be necessary in order to demonstrate a statistically significant benefit of routinely administering ketorolac, with its potential side-effects, to all patients undergoing laparoscopic sterilization as out-patients.
...
PMID:Intramuscular ketorolac for postoperative analgesia following laparoscopic sterilisation. 777 31
We have compared in 25 children the effect of preoperative with postoperative caudal block on pain after circumcision in a double-blind, randomized study. After induction of
anaesthesia
, patients were allocated randomly to receive a caudal block either before (n = 14) or immediately after (n = 11) surgery.
Postoperative pain
was rated on a paediatric pain scale. If pain occurred, children received paracetamol in a dose related to body weight. Using the Mann-Whitney U test (significance < or = 0.05) there was no significant difference in cumulative postoperative analgesic requirements within the first 48 h and in times to first analgesic administration between the groups. Cumulative pain score, assessed every 30 min for the first 8 h after operation, was significantly lower for those patients who received caudal
anaesthesia
after operation. Thus we could not demonstrate any advantage in performing caudal block before compared with after surgery.
...
PMID:Pre-emptive analgesia: comparison of preoperative with postoperative caudal block on postoperative pain in children. 799 81
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