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Resident Version Pain Management Module Created by Dr. David Olson Objectives: 1. Differentiate between somatic, visceral, and neuropathic pain by listing two unique characteristics for each. 2. List 3 signs of pain. 3. Identify two appropriate indications and limitations of non-opioid therapy. 4. Convert three common narcotic medications between IV and orals, and long versus short acting pharmacotherapy. References: 1. Schneider, C; Yale, Steven H.; Larson, M. Principles of Pain Management. Clinical Medicine & Research Volume 1, Number 4: 337-340; 2003. 2. Trescot, Andrea; Boswell, Mark. Opiod Guidelines in the Management of Chronic NonCancer Pain. Pain Physician, 2006; 9:1-40. 3. Krakowski, I; Theobald, S. Practice Guidelines: Summary version of the Standards, Options and Recommendations for the use of analgesia for the treatment of nociceptive pain in adults with cancer. British Journal of Cancer (2003) 89(Suppl 1) s67-s72. Discussion Outline: A. Pain: is a highly subjective experience, unique to each patient and defined individually based on experience and perceptions. I. Types of Pain: Symptoms Visceral: Pain from internal organs – primarily from inflammation or distension of the organ capsule Poorly Localized Referred pain to similarly enervated areas Pain waxes and wanes, pressure like “squeezing” Neuropathic: Pain referred to the body region innervated by damaged nerves Burning, Tingling, Electric Shock quality Often triggered by light touch “hyperalgesia” Poorly localized Somatic: Nociceptive pain from activation of pain receptors in surface or deep tissue Highly localizable Sharp, focal pain Often more constant, increasing with evaluation of the affected area II. Signs: On Physical Exam Although none of these signs are highly sensitive or specific, they can be used as guides before and during therapy. Overall appearance: The patient can appear very comfortable or be writhing. The presentation depends on the patient. Multiple pain rating scales are available, commonly used are scales with evenly spaced 1-10 numbers and the patient visually grades their pain. There are also categorical scales using facial expressions for severity. Tachycardia Tachypnea High Blood Pressure III. Pharmacotherapeutic options: IV. Starting Therapy: A. Oral: If patient tolerating PO then start oral if pain is not severe: 1. Tylenol → NSAIDS → Codeine/Ultram → Hydrocodone → Oxycodone → Morphine 2. Start patient on home therapy, unless they are having side effects. 3. Begin with short acting medications 4. Remember withdrawal is dangerous; never stop a chronic narcotic without good reasons. B. IV: For patients not tolerating PO, or in severe pain: 1. Morphine → Dilaudid → Fentanyl → PCA 2. PRN meds: remember to start low and titrate up (2mg q2hrs versus 10mg q4hrs) 3. Remember parameters: hold for sleeping, low respiratory rate, low blood pressure. C. Bowel Regimen: Always remember to start a bowel regimen: 1. Ducosate/Senna, Lactulose if severe constipation, Enemas for pt’s not taking PO. D. Neuropathic pain: use Gabapentin or low dose tricyclic antidepressant as initial Regimen. E. Functional Chronic Pain (i.e. Fibromyalgia): does not respond to opiod management; consider using SSRI or TCAs. IV. Escalating Therapy and Long Term Treatment: A. Escalating for short term pain relief: Goal is pain relief with few side effects Monitor daily usage and adjust as needed Treat the underlying cause of pain If no pain control is obtained, consider whether pain is somatic, visceral or neuropathic (neuropathic pain rarely responds to opioid management) B. Long acting medications Consider if patient not controlled with high doses of short acting OR If patient will require long term pain control OR If patient is cycling between sedation and severe pain C. Converting to long acting Determine the total 24 hour usage for the patient Start long acting orals to equal 2/3 of the 24 hour use of short acting medications o Consider the differing dosing schedule of the long acting meds o Oxycontin q12 hrs o MSContin; Morphine SR q8 or q12 hours o Methadone q6, q8 or q12hrs o Fentanyl Patch q72hrs Start short acting breakthrough at 10-15% of the total long acting dose at an appropriate interval (q4 to q6hrs) D. Adjusting long acting medications o Make sure you have given the long acting time to reach steady state, which takes 4 to 5 half-lives o Add long acting medication equivalent to 50% of breakthrough usage o Reassess patient regularly for overuse and continue adjusting for pain control VI. Converting IV to Oral and Back: Oral Drug Parenteral (IV) 100 Codeine 60 n/a Fentanyl 0.1 15 Hydrocodone n/a 4 Dilaudid 1.5 150 Demerol 50 10 Methadone 5 15 Morphine 5 10 Oxycodone n/a Conversions are equivalent horizontally and vertically. Fentanyl Patch: 25mcg/72hrs = 45-60mg oral morphine in 24 hrs VII. Contraindications: 1. Liver problems: maximum 2gms Tylenol/24h, consider the longer half-life in liver disease 2. GI bleeding: Avoid NSAIDs 3. Elderly: more affected by opioids, consider starting at 50% of short acting doses to prevent overdose VIII. Reversing Pain Meds: 1. Narcan to reverse opioids 2. Flumazenil to reverse benzodiazepines (do not reverse in chronic users, high risk of seizure) CASE 81 yo male who is admitted for severe pain from spinal stenosis. His past medical history is significant for CRI, DM, HTN and BPH. The patient was converted from a PCA to morphine sustained release yesterday and has been complaining of increased pain in the R hip and lower back. He has used 10mg of oxycodone in the last 24 hours as breakthrough. His PCA usage shows: total 24 hour use of 29 mg morphine His current regimen is: Morphine SR 30mg q8hrs Oxycodone 5mg q4hrs PRN Cyclobenzaprine 10mg bid Ibuprofen 600mg TID 1. Was the conversion to Oral from IV appropriate? 2. Should the long acting or short acting be increased due to pain? 3. No changes to the regimen were made. The next day the patient is poorly arousable, breathing 4 times per minute. Why? What should you do? Review Questions: 1. 47 yo female presents to your clinic for the first evaluation. At this time the patient states she is in continual pain and her previous doctor had been treating her chronic pain, but she recently changed insurance carriers. She has been doing well on Morphine 90mg bid, and states she only uses oxycodone a few times a day. Her main concern today is getting her medications refilled. Physical exam: Vitals: Pain 6/10, HR 54, BP 102/45, RR 8 Gen: well-groomed, although slow to respond and without stimulus falls asleep easily M/S: multiple tender areas over trapezius, posterior cervical musculature, upper gluteal region and costochondral junctions; symmetric and bilateral. Joints: full range of motion, no synovitis and no pain with active or passive movement. What is the most appropriate action? A. Refill her medications B. Refill her medications; begin an evaluation of her pain C. Refill her medications at a lower dose and begin a taper of her dosage; begin an evaluation of her pain D. Do not refill her medications E. Do not refill her medications and begin an evaluation of her pain 2. 65 yo male with a history DM, CAD and chronic back pain presents after witnessed aspiration with respiratory distress. The patient is stabilized in the ICU overnight then transferred to the floor. His respiratory distress has improved and his wbc count is responding to the antibiotics well. Speech therapy has seen the patient and has determined that the patient continues to aspirate anything oral. While you are working up the cause of his aspiration the patient needs to remain NPO. 72 hours after admission the vitals are: HR 112, Tc 100.6, RR 23, Bp 170/96 Pain 9/10. He also complains of anxiety, and is having muscular tremors. You review the chart and discover he was using methadone at 100mg per day for his chronic back pain, and has not received this in at least 4 days. As the patient is unable to take orals, what would be the appropriate converted dosage for replacement of his methadone at this time? A. Oxycodone 5-10mg po q6hrs as needed B. Morphine 10mg iv q6 hours and 2-4mg iv q4 hours prn for breakthrough C. Morphine SR 15mg tid and 2-4mg iv q4hrs for breakthough D. Morphine PCA basal rate 2mg with 1mg q 15 minutes and lockout at 10mg in 4 hours. E. Fentanyl 75mcg patch 3. 59 yo male with prostate cancer, which has metastasized to his bones is in the hospital for a significant exacerbation of congestive heart failure. He was continued on his chronic opioids (morphine sr 45mg q8hr, oxycodone 10mg q6hrs prn breakthrough), however states that he pain has been much less controlled than previously. He recently received a pamidronate infusion for bone pain. The concern is that the patient may not be absorbing the oral medications effectively and is therefore receiving less pain medication than is needed. What changes would be appropriate? A. B. C. D. E. Increase the morphine sr by 50% and monitor for improvement. Begin a PCA for pain control Start patient on IV morphine prn Begin Fentanyl patch at 75mcg/72hrs and stop morphine sr Begin Fentanyl patch at 75mcg/72hrs and continue morphine sr for 48-72 hrs 4. 54 yo male with squamous cell carcinoma of the throat and left esophageal wall, with a gtube and a tracheostomy, is admitted to hospital for palliative care. At this time he states that his pain is poorly controlled. He is on a Fentanyl 25 mcg/hr patch and oxycodone 10 mg po q4 hours (average use 50mg/day). Pt is also experiencing significant anxiety. Patients’ wife further states that her husband had a “problem with Meth” less than one yr ago. She is concerned about his “need for drugs” and does not “want him to be high.” Physical exam: Vitals: Pain 8/10 Hr 112 Bp 98/58 Gen: frail, flat affect, pale man lying on his left side with hob elevated 45 degrees continuously coughing up bloody sputum. Answers questions by placing finger over trach opening-defers other questions to his wife to answer. HEENT: firm lesion-left side of neck, trach in place-blood tinged sputum, facial edema-bright mucous membranes, no exudate-poor visualization secondary to facial edema. What would be the most appropriate change to treat the patients symptoms (assume Fentanyl 25 mcg/hr patch = morphine 60 mg/24hr po)? A. Stop Fentanyl patch. Begin hydromorphone 1 mg/hr hypodermoclysis, lorazepam po prn, and morphine 20 mg po 1 hour prn for break through pain. B. Increase Fentanyl 25 mcg/hr patch to 50 mcg/hr. Cont oxycodone 10 mg po q4 hours. C. Stop Fentanyl patch. Increase prn oxycodone dose to 20 mg po q4 hours and begin lorazepam po prn. D. Stop Fentanyl patch. Begin hydromorphone 1 mg/hr with dexamethasone and lorazepam hypodermoclysis and morphine 20 mg po q1 hour prn for breakthrough pain. E. Increase Fentanyl 25 mcg/hr patch to 50 mcg/hr. Decrease prn oxycodone dose and frequency because the patient is asking for it too often and his wife is concerned that he is using it to “get high”. Post Module Evaluation Please place completed evaluation in an interdepartmental mail envelope and address to Dr. Wendy Gerstein, Department of Medicine, VAMC (111). 1) Topic of module:__________________________ 2) On a scale of 1-5, how effective was this module for learning this topic? _________ (1= not effective at all, 5 = extremely effective) 3) Were there any obvious errors, confusing data, or omissions? Please list/comment below: ______________________________________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ 4) Was the attending involved in the teaching of this module? Yes/no (please circle). 5) Please provide any further comments/feedback about this module, or the inpatient curriculum in general: 6) Please circle one: Attending Resident (R2/R3) Intern Medical student