Postoperative Management of Pain
Management of Postoperative Pain
Dr Alice Man
Department of Anaesthesia & Intensive Care
The Chinese University of Hong Kong
Prince of Wales Hospital
“By any reasonable code, freedom from pain should be a basic human right, limited only by our knowledge to achieve it”
- Liebeskind JC & Melzack R
IASP definition of Pain:
An unpleasant sensory and emotional experience associated with actual or potential tissue damage, or described in terms of such damage.
Physiological mechanism of acute pain:
1. Nociceptors
2. Peripheral chemical mediators
3. Pain transmission pathways
4. Pain modulation
[pic]
Why should we treat postoperative pain?
Possible harmful effects of untreated severe acute pain:
A. Cardiovascular- activation of sympathetic nervous system→
1. hypertension, tachycardia, ↑ myocardial contraction, vascular resistance→↑ myocardial O2 demand
2. decreased coronary vasoconstriction→ ↓ myocardial O2 supply
→myocardial ischaemia
B. Respiratory- surgical incision and pain→
1. splinting diaphragm, reflex inhibition of phrenic nerve→ decreased lung volume, atelectasis
2. poor cough, sputum retention→postoperative pneumonia, hypoxaemia
C. Gastrointestinal- activation of spinal reflex arc→impaired gastric and intestinal motility→ ileus
D. Genitourinary- Urinary retention
E. Neuroendocrine: release of stress hormones e.g. catecholamines, GH, cortisol, glucagons ACTH, ADH, rennin, angiotensin II and interleukin→
Hyperglycaemia, increased coagulability, protein breakdown, negative nitrogen balance, impairment of wound healing, immune function, Na and water retention, increased metabolic demand
F. Musculoskeletal
1. muscle spasm→Reduce resp function
2. immobility→ increased venous stasis, DVT
G. Psychological
Anxiety, fear, insomnia, fatique, aggressive behaviour
H. Chronic pain
Inguinal hernia, mastectomy, thoractomy
General Principles of Pain management:
1. Proper assessment (site, nature of severity) and control of pain require patient involvement.
2. Effective analgesia requires flexibility and tailoring of Tx to individual patient: route, dose of medication
3. While it is not always possible to completely alleviate pain, it should be possible to reduce pain to a tolerable or comfortable level.
4. Reevaluate for effectiveness, SE of Tx and treat accordingly.
Factors Affecting the Postoperative Pain:
A. Surgical factors:
1. site of incision and nature of the surgery
upper abdomen > thoracotomy > lower abdomen > limbs
2. complications, e.g. wound infection, intraabdominal sepsis, distension
B. Patient factors:
Psychology, genetic, hx of substance abuse, hx of chronic pain
Causes of Post-Operative Pain:
1. incisional skin and subcutaneous tissue
2. deep cutting, coagulation, trauma
3. positional bed sore, nerve compression & traction
4. IV site needle trauma, extravasation, venous irritation
5. tubes drains, nasogastric tube, ETT
6. respiratory from ETT, coughing, deep breathing
7. rehab physiotherapy, movement, ambulation
8. surgical complication of surgery
9. others cast, dressing too tight, urinary retention
Acute Pain Service (APS):
1. Education
2. introduction and supervision of more advanced analgesic techniques e.g. iv PCA
3. improvement of traditional analgesic Tx
4. standardization of equipment, standing order, guidelines, protocol
5. 24-hr availability of pain service personnel
6. collaboration and communication with other medical staff
7. audit of pain service
8. research
Pain assessment:
1. Simple ranking: no pain, mild pain, moderate pain, severe pain
2. Verbal numeric scale (VNS):
0. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
no pain unbearable
3. faces rating scale (for children):
Pharmacology
1. Simple analgesic
Paracetamol-for mild pain, caution with liver impairment
Dologesic- paracetamol+propoxyphene- mild to moderate pain
2. NSAID
e.g. ketorolac, diclofenacl naproxen, piroxicam, ibuprofen, indomethacin
- Mild and moderate pain
- Opioid sparing
- SE: peptic ulcer and bleeding, platelet aggregation inhibition, bronchospasm, renal impairment, allergy
- CI: bleeding, hypovolaemia, GIB, pregnancy, breast feeding, hypersensitivity, renal impairment, asthma
3. Opioid
e.g. morphine, pethidine, fentanyl , codeine phosphate, methadone, dextro-propoxyphene
Desirable effects
Analgesia
Sedation
Adverse effects
Over sedation
Respiratory depression
Nausea & vomiting
Pruritus
Urinary retention
Constipation
Dysphoria, hallucination
Addiction
4. Local Anaesthetic
e.g. bupivacaine (marcain), lignocaine
-used in epidural and regional analgesia
-features of LA toxicity : perioral numbness, dizziness, tinnitis, diplopia, drowsiness, convulsion coma, respiratory depression, CVS depression
Methods of Acute Postoperaive Pain Relief:
A. Pharmacological
1. Oral
e.g. paracetamol, NSAID
-if patient can tolerate oral intake
2. PR
e.g. paracetamol, voltaren, tramadol
-unpleasant
-delayed onset
-variable absorption
3. Intramuscular
-often ineffective
-individual patient variation in dose-response
-fluctuating blood level on prn basis
-delay in injection and absorption
-pain on injection
4. Intravenous
-intermittent bolus: fast onset, need close monitoring, need repeated small bolus, fluctuating blood level
-continuous infusion: need close monitoring, more steady blood level, dfficult to judge optimal dose
5. Patient Control Analgesia (PCA)
- sense of being in control of analgesia, no delay, higher satisfaction, therapeutic level maintained, ? lower dose of overdose
6. Epidural analgesia
Mode of administration
intermittent opioid bolus
PCA opioid
continuous infusion - LA+opioid
Advantages
most effective analgesia
systemic effect of opioid minimal
pre-empty analgesia
reduce incidence of thromboembolism
Side Effects
From the technique
dural puncture
epidural haematoma
epidural abscess
nerve root trauma
From LA
hypotension
paraesthesia
motor weakness
From opioid
delay resp depress
urinary retention
pruritus
herpes simplex
7. Intrathecal
8. Regional block
9. Transnasal e.g. Butorphanol
10. transmucusal e.g. fentanyl lollipop
11. sublingual e.g. Buprenorphine
B. Non-Pharmacological Methods
1. Psychotherapy
distraction
information
2. Behavioral therapy
modification
3. Physical therapy
TENS
acupuncture
cryoanalgesia
heat therapy
Choice of analgesia modality:
Patient factors
physical conditions
age, cognitive ability
previous experience
psychological state
oral diet ?
drug interaction
Surgical factors
type and extent of surgery
surgical complication
Anaesthetic factors
anasthetic technique
expertise
available resource
ward nurse training
Emergency!
Opioid overdose:
Causes: human error, equipment malfunction, patient risk factors,
Presentation: Altered conscious state, slow RR, desaturation, small pupil
Ddx: stroke, electrolyte disturbance, hypoxaemia, hypercarbia, hypotension
Mx:
1. ABC
2. ? drowsy, rousable
3. stop PCA/ Continuous infusion
4. give O2 via mask, ambu bag
5. monitor closely
6. inform APS
7. give 0.1mg narloxone iv and repeat 3-5min as necessary
Hypotension:
Epidural analgesia- sympathetic blockade, iv PCA
Ddx: hypovolaemia, cardiogenic, distributive, obstructive
Mx:
1. Assess patient, recheck BP
2. ABC
3. give O2
4. stop epidural infusion, iv PCA
5. iv fluid challenge, vasopressor
6. exclude other causes e.g. haemorrhage
Nausea and vomiting
Ddx: residual anaesthetic effect, pain, hypoxaemia, hypotension, mechanical (abdominal distension, ileus)
Mx:
1. assess patient: check BP, pulse, conscious level, Sa O2
2. exclude other causes
3. reassure patient
4. give antiemetic
5. alternative analgesia if necessary
Pruritis
Opioid, esp intrathecal, epidural use
Ddx: local irritation
Mx:
1. assess patient, ?skin rash, local irrtation
2. give chlorpheniramine iv, oral
3. if severe, alternative analgesia
4. low dose naloxone
Urinary retention
sympathetic blockade
Ddx: obstructive
Mx:
1. assess patient, palpate bladder
2. bladder catheterization
3. low dose naloxone
Leg weakness/ Paraesthesia
Motor/ sensory fibre blockade by epidural LA
Ddx: spinal cord compression e.g. epidural haematoma, abscess, spinal cord ischaemia due to surgery, severe hypotension, toxic effect of LA on nerve and spinal Cord
Mx:
1. assess, exclude other causes (check back pain, sensory and motor deficit, bowel and bladder incontinence)
2. reassure patient and ensure no injury to limbs w/ weakness
3. inform APS
Postop Nausea & Vomiting
Pathophysiology of Nausea & Vomiting
[pic]
High risk of PONV:
Patient: young, F, early preg, previous hx of PONV, motion sickness, anxiety
Increased gastric vol: obesity, blood in stomach
Anaesthetic technique: RA vs GA, N2O, opioid
Surgical: duration, laparoscopy, eye, ear operation
Post op: pain, movement, hypotension, forced oral fluid
Mx:
1. identify cause of PONV and ensure pain control, adequate hydration, oxygenstion, slow and deep breath, stable BP, gentle handling of pt
2. pharmacological tx:
-Anticholinergic: scopolamine
-Phenothiazine: prochlorperazine, promethazine
-Butyrophenones: droperidol
-Benzamides: metoclopramide
-Antihistamine: cyclizine, diphenhydramine
-Corticosteroid: dexamethasone, betamethasone
-5-HT antagonist: ondansetron, topisetron
3. Non-pharmacological:
NGT?
Acupuncture
4.
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