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WELCOME! Thank you for joining Pain Management Our program will begin shortly. Pain Management TODAY’S PRESENTER: Jennifer Hale, RN BS CHPN Georgia Hospice and Palliative Care Organization Rome, GA October 21, 2010 Objectives 1. Describe the prevalence of pain in the hospice and palliative care setting 2. Recognize the impact of pain on patients, families and the healthcare system 3. Identify common barriers to effective pain management 4 Objectives 4. Define the types of pain experienced by the hospice and palliative patient 5. State the principles of effective pain management 6 Identify the components of a thorough pain assessment 5 Undertreatment of Pain • 70-90% of patients with advance disease experience pain • 50% hospitalized patient’s experience pain • 80% of long term care experience pain – Only 40-50% are given analgesics • Pain scores (on a 0-10 scale) greater than or equal to “5” greatly impact on quality of life 6 Impact of Poorly Controlled Pain • Physical • Psychosocial • Emotional • Financial • Spiritual 7 Interdisciplinary Resources • • • • • Pain affects multiple dimensions No one discipline can address all issues Strengths and talents of many disciplines Address multiple institutional barriers On going communication 8 Cost of Poor Pain Management • • • • • $100 billion per year Chronic pain is most expensive heath problem 40 million physician visits per year for pain 25% of all work days lost are due to pain Improving pain management costs less than cost of inadequate relief 9 Pain Co-morbidities • • • • Depression Anxiety disorder Diabetes Chronic fatigue syndrome 10 Barriers to Effective Pain Management Patient / family Reluctance to report; fear that pain = worse disease; not being a “good patient”; reluctance to take/administer pain meds Healthcare Provider Inadequate knowledge; poor assessment skills; regulatory concerns; concerns about addiction, side effects, tolerance Institutional Low priority for pain treatment; inadequate reimbursement; regulatory issues; availability of specific meds 11 Definition of Pain • An unpleasant sensory and emotional experience associated with actual or potential tissue damage, or described in terms of such damage (APS) – Multiple components – Pain is a COMPLEX experience (both subjective and objective aspects) – Pain is not ONLY related to tissue damage but is best described in such terms (most patients have a difficult time relating emotional or psychosocial pain in terms other than physical) 12 Definition of Pain • Pain is whatever the experiencing person says it is, existing whenever he/she says it does (McCaffery & Pasero, 1999) – Subjective report is still the most reliable and must be believed – Downside: This definition does not capture the pain experience of non-verbal patients 13 Types of Pain Acute Accompanied by physiological Responds well to analgesic treatment Intermittent/episodic experiences and may progress to chronic TREAT PAIN even if cause is not known Chronic Usually persist for longer than 3 months Autonomic nervous system adapts - patient does not exhibit objective signs of pain Often associated with significant changes in personality, lifestyle, ADL function Breakthrough Pain (BTP) Transient increase in pain to greater than moderate intensity 14 Classification of Pain Nociceptive Pain • The normal processing of stimuli that damages normal tissues or has the potential to do so if prolonged • Usually responsive to non-opioids and/or opioids • Stimuli from somatic or visceral structures 15 Types of Nociceptive Pain Somatic Pain • Bone, Joints, Muscle, Skin, Connective tissue • Throbbing, dull • Well localized 16 Types of Nociceptive Pain Visceral Pain • Visceral organs • Squeezing, cramping, pressure, deep • Tumor involvement of organ capsule – Aching & well localized • Intermittent cramping & poorly localized • Includes referred pain (shoulder pain secondary to esophageal or gall bladder irritation) 17 Classification of Pain Neuropathic Pain • Abnormal processing of sensory input by central or peripheral nervous system • Mechanisms not as well understood • Burning, shooting, tingling, numbness, radiating, electrical • Responds to adjuvant analgesics 18 Neuropathic Pain Centrally generated pain Deafferentation pain – caused by injury to nerve at CNS or PNS (amputation) Sympathetically maintained pain – dysregulation of autonomic nervous system Peripherally generated pain Painful polyneuropathies Diabetic neuropathy, Guillain-Barre syndrome Painful mononeuropathies Nerve root compression, trigeminal neuralgia 19 APS 12 Principles of Pain Management 1. Individualize dose, route and schedule 2. Around the clock dosing 20 APS 12 Principles of Pain Management 3. Selection of opioids • • Morphine is gold standard for strong opioid Patients respond differently to different meds – keep trying! 4. Adequate dosing for infants/children • • Clinical and pharmacokinetics of opioids in children and infants over 6 mos. of age are approximately the same as in adults – dosing difference based on WEIGHT Don’t under treat pain in kids! 21 APS 12 Principles of Pain Management 5. Follow patients closely • • • Monitor for pain relief and side effects frequently Adjust pain regimen accordingly Check frequently when adding new med, changing meds or changing routes/delivery 6. Use equianalgesic dosing 22 APS 12 Principles of Pain Management 7. Recognize and treat side effects • Most common side effects include: • • Sedation, constipation, nausea, itching, respiratory depression Treat side effects: • • • Change regimen/route Try a different opioid Add another drug to manage side effects (bowel regimen!) 23 APS 12 Principles of Pain Management 8. Be aware of hazards of Demerol® and mixed agonist-antagonists • • Mixed agonist-antagonists include pentazocine, nalbuphine, butorphanol and may reduce overall analgesic effect due to mu-receptor binding Meperidine produces toxic metabolite which decreases seizure threshold (especially for sickle-cell patients) and does not respond well to naloxone nor is it recommended for use longer than 48 hrs 24 APS 12 Principles of Pain Management 9. Watch for development of tolerance 10. Be aware of physical dependence 25 APS 12 Principles of Pain Management 11. Do not label a patient addicted 12. Be aware of psychological state 26 WHO Ladder Recommendations • Portrays progression in the doses and types of analgesic drugs for effective pain relief • Changes as patients condition and characteristics of pain change • Orally whenever possible • “By the clock” dosing • Based on assessment of the individual’s pain experience 27 WHO 3-Step Ladder for Treating Pain Acute Pain Severe Pain (pain will get better) Morphine, Methadone, Oxycodone (strong Opioid) Moderate Pain Tylenol w/Codeine; Lortab; Percocet (mild Opioid) or strong opioid at low dose Mild Pain Tylenol, Advil, Vioxx, Ultram (Non-Opioid) Chronic Pain (Pain will not go away) WHO Ladder Step 1 (Mild pain) Mild Pain • 1-3 on a scale of 0-10 • Non-opioids • Adjuvants – As analgesics – To reduce side effects 29 WHO Ladder Step 2 (Moderate pain) Moderate Pain • 4-6 on a scale of 0-10 • Mixed opioid/non-opioid meds or opioids in low doses (new recommendation) – Why new recommendation? • Non-opioids and adjuvants may be continued 30 WHO Ladder Step 3 (Severe pain) Severe Pain • 7-10 on a scale of 0-1 • Add higher doses of opioids • Titrate to best effect • Monitor for increase in side effects as dose escalates • Continue non-opioids and adjuvants 31 Pain Assessment Principles • Accept patient’s complaint of pain • History of pain • Assessment for non-verbal patients – FLACC – PAINAD • Patient centered goals 32 Pain Assessment Principles • Nonverbal signs of pain • Psychological impact of pain • Diagnostic workup – Not common in EOL care but necessary to assess tumor size/location or broken bones, etc • Assess effectiveness and side effects of pain medication 33 Initial Pain Assessment Onset/duration -When did the pain first begin? -Is it associated with a particular activity? -Other symptoms? Site -More than 75% persons with cancer have pain in 2 or more sites -Ask patient to point to where it hurts – do this with each site of pain expressed -Assess each site for pain intensity, quality, duration 34 Initial Pain Assessment Severity/intensity -Select pain scale appropriate to patient Quality -Ask patient to describe their pain – patient’s words are best, provide adjectives if necessary Exacerbating/relieving factors -What makes the pain worse or what causes the pain? -Assess the pain at rest, with movement, and in relation to daily activity -Ask the caregivers how patient is doing with activities 35 Initial Pain Assessment Effects of pain on quality of life -What does the pain mean to the patient and family? -Does the pain keep the patient from doing activities he/she enjoys? Medication history -Current – including topicals, OTCs, homeopathic remedies, etc -Past -Side effects 36 Initial Pain Assessment Physical -Examine site(s) of pain, including referral sites -Consider disease process, extent of progression Cultural considerations -AVOID cultural generalities and determine individual differences but keep in mind that cultural implications are present and can impact reporting, assessment Other factors -Age – elderly often more stoic, more fearful -Gender – men generally more stoic, women more emotive -Environmental – calm, quiet, temperate, soothing, dark 37 Non-opioids • Used in acute and chronic pain • Relief for mild/moderate pain – Most effective with nociceptive pain (muscle and joint pain) • Combined with opioid analgesics for both additive analgesic effects or opioid dose sparing effects 38 Non-opioids Acetaminophen • Mechanism – not well understood • Dosing – decrease for patients with hepatic impairment – Short half-life, Q4H dosing recommended to dose limit (4gm, 3gm in elderly) • Routes 39 Non-opioids Acetaminophen • Side effects Considerations • Be aware of hidden doses, i.e., APAP in combination products 40 Non-opioids NSAIDs • Characteristics – analgesic effects through the inhibition of prostaglandin production – multipurpose analgesia • Drug choices – If no response after 3 days of adjustment, consider switching to different NSAID – Contraindicated If patient is hypersensitive or allergic to ASA or other NSAID’s 41 Non-opioids NSAIDs • Dosing – PRN basis for occasional pain – Around-the-clock (ATC) for ongoing pain • Routes of Administration • Common meds include: – Ibuprofen, ketoprofen, naproxen sodium, aspirin 42 Non-opioids NSAIDs • Sides Effects – Hematologic – better option is APAP if possible – GI - use enteric coated, take with food, H2 blocker (ranitidine) – Renal – chronic use at high doses can lead to this complication – Cognitive Impairment – dizziness, drowsiness are common, short term memory loss less common and less often reported – Cardiovascular 43 Teaching Points for Non-opioids • Risk for GI bleeding with NSAIDs • Why medication ordered • Stopping medications • Reporting side effects 44 Opioids • CNS action - bind to opioid receptor site in brain and spinal cord • mu, kappa, and delta receptor sites • Pain relief occurs when opioids bind to 1 or more receptors as an agonist • Agonists and agonist - antagonists 45 Pure Agonist Opioids • Expect physical dependence • Withdrawal will occur when abruptly stopped or naloxone (Narcan®) is given • Prevent withdrawal by reducing by 25% • Tolerance to side effects other than constipation • Tolerance to analgesia is rare • Nociceptive pain more responsive to pure agonist opioids than neuropathic • Use pure agonists for BTP 46 Choice of Opioid Drug -One pure agonist with one route -If one not relieving pain with titration, may need to switch medication 2 reasons to switch: unmanageable side effects or toxicity secondary to metabolite accumulation -All pure agonist have same side effects but patient variability in experience Side effects may be reported as allergies – especially itching and nausea -Rapid onset formulation for breakthrough 47 Opioids Morphine • Considered ‘gold standard’ for opioid analgesic • Standard for comparison in opioid use • Some patients cannot tolerate because of the side effects – Tolerance to side effects in a few days – No tolerance to constipation • MS half-life = 2-4 hrs • SL is NOT absorbed under the tongue but trickles down to the GI tract and is processed in the gut 48 Opioids Codeine -Appropriate for mild pain -Metabolized by liver Fentanyl -Routes include IV, epidural, Topical patch -Limitations Hydrocodone -Found in combination therapy with acetaminophen ONLY 49 Opioids Hydromorphone • Short half life and lack of metabolite problems make it preferable to morphine in patients with renal insufficiency, particularly the elderly • Most useful in post-op pain management or in SC infusions due to availability of high-dose concentrations 50 Opioids Meperidine • Contraindicated – normeperidine (active metabolite) acts as a CNS stimulant 51 Opioids Methadone – Long half life (12-190 hrs) – Inexpensive – Monitor closely for arrhythmias – Negative perception due to use in drug rehab setting – 85% bioavailability and metabolized in LIVER – CUMULATIVE effect so must use caution with titration – wait at least a week! Not recommended for patients who cannot be closely monitored or who may not be disciplined enough to adhere to dosing schedule – Conversion is difficult and requires physician and pharmacist collaboration 52 Opioids Oxycodone • Used in acute, cancer, chronic nonmalignant pain • Mild to severe intensity Propoxyphene • Considered a weak analgesic • Prescribed for mild to moderate pain • Not recommended for chronic pain, cancer pain, end-of-life care • Active metabolite accumulates in kidneys causing tremors, seizures 53 Mixed Agonist-antagonists Indications • Not recommended for chronic pain • Ceiling doses • Psychomimetic effects – Disorientation/hallucinations 54 Mixed Agonist-antagonists Buprenorphine (Buprenex®) Butorphanol (Stadol®) Nalbuphine (Nubain®) Pentazocine (Talwin®) 55 Opioid Dosing • • • • Multiple routes available for pure agonists If current dose safe but ineffective, increase by 25% to 50% until pain relief occurs or unmanageable side effects present No ceiling effect for pure agonists All opioids have side effects that eventually limit dose escalation 56 Management of Opioid Side Effects Constipation - Most common side effect of opioids – tolerance is NEVER developed to this side effect - Bowel regimen NOT fiber or increased fluids (may lead to impaction) Preventive action important – stool softener and stimulant most helpful combination There are many meds to choose from in the different classifications Opioids reduce gastric motility and peristaltic action – may consider metaclopramide as preventive 57 Management of Opioid Side Effects Nausea and Vomiting • May be due to – stimulation of chemoreceptor trigger zone in brain – slowing of GI motility – effects on balance and equilibrium of inner ear • Management: – Based on cause of nausea – use appropriate med based on cause – PRN to ATC OK – May need to switch opioid for best effect 58 Management of Opioid Side Effects Sedation - Usually when opioids started or dose increased - Tolerance will occur over period of days to weeks Pruritus - Can occur with any associated histamine release & commonly with morphine - May be generalized, usually localized to face, neck, chest - Usually not accompanied by rash - Management by decreasing opioid dose by 25% and adding adjuvant analgesic or with diphenhydramine (Benadryl) but is sedating and should be used cautiously in elderly 59 Management of Opioid Side Effects Mental status change • Cause of increased anxiety and fear for patients, families, caregivers • Assess to ensure that opioid is cause • Management – – – – Eliminate non-essential CNS meds Consider reduction of opioid by 25% and adding adjuvant analgesic Add haloperidol in small dose Switch opioids 60 Management of Opioid Side Effects Respiratory depression -Considered clinically significant when there is a decrease in rate and depth of respirations from baseline -Tolerance develops over period of days to weeks -Longer patient on opioid, less likely to develop -Prevention by appropriate titration, monitoring of sedation levels -Monitor sedation levels respiratory status, every 1-2 hours for first 24 hours in opioid naïve -Respiratory depression is not just a measure of breaths per minute – assess responsiveness and pupilary response as well 61 Adjuvants • Non pain medications that have analgesic effects on certain types of pain • Chronic neuropathic pain • Additional therapy to opioids • Distinct primary therapy 62 Adjuvants • Choice of Drug • Depends on type of pain, patient age, and other medical condition • Individual response • Sequential trials 63 Addiction - “A pattern of compulsive drug use characterized by a continued craving for an opioid for effects other than pain relief” (APS, 1999) - Individuals become overwhelmingly involved with using or procuring the drug and may display drug seeking behaviors such as: missed office or clinic appointments with subsequent off-hour calls for prescription refills, theft or forgery of prescriptions, prescription-seeking from more than one physician, theft of drugs from family members or other patients, buying or selling drugs on the streets 64 Pseudoaddiction • The patient who seeks additional medications appropriately or inappropriately secondary to significant under treatment of the pain syndrome – – – – Clock watching Manipulation of staff Hoarding Doctor shopping • Behaviors cease when pain is treated 65 Tolerance • A form of neuro-adaptation to the effects of chronically administered opioids which is indicated by the need for increasing or more frequent doses of the medication to achieve the initial effects • Clinicians should not fear tolerance in patients with extended life expectancy • Tolerance happens! Teaching is most important. 66 Physical Dependence A physiological state in which abrupt cessation of the opioid results in withdrawal syndrome -Physical dependency on opioids is an expected occurrence in all individuals in the presence of continuous use of opioids for therapeutic or for non-therapeutic purposes. It does not, in and of itself, imply addiction 67 Non-pharmacological Pain Management • Use concurrently with medications • Methods – Cognitive-behavioral • Relaxation • Guided imagery • Distraction 68 Non-pharmacological Pain Management Methods • Physical interventions – Hot and Cold – Massage – Positioning – Exercise 69 Non-pharmacological Pain Management Complementary therapies – Therapeutic touch – Music therapy – Aromatherapy 70 Non-pharmacological Pain Management • Methods • Physical interventions – Positioning – Exercise 71 References 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. Berry PH, ed. Core Curriculum for the Generalist Hospice and Palliative Nurse. 2nd ed. Dubuque, IA: Kendal/Hunt; 2005. SUPPORT SPI. A controlled trial to improve care for seriously ill hospitalized patients: a study to understand prognoses and preferences for outcomes and risks of treatments (SUPPORT). Journal of the American Medical Association. 1995;274:1591-1598. McMillan S. Pain and pain relief experienced by hospice patients with cancer. Cancer Nursing. 1996;19:298-307. Warfield C, Kahn C. Acute pain management: programs in U.S. hospitals and experiences and attitudes among U.S. adults. Anesthesiology. 1995;83:1090-1094. Ferrell BR, Dean G. The meaning of cancer pain. Seminars in Oncology Nursing. 1995:11(1):17-22. 72 References 6. Gloth F. Concerns with chronic analgesic therapy in elderly patients. American Journal of Medicine. 1996;101(suppl 1A):19S-24S. 7. McCaffery M, Passero C. Pain: Clinical Manual. St. Louis, MO: Mosby; 1999. 8. Arnst C. Conquering Pain. Business Week. 1999:3681102-109. 9. Paice JA, Fine PG. Pain at the end of life. In: Ferrell BR, Coyle N, eds. Textbook of Palliative Nursing. 2nd ed. New York, NY: Oxford University Press; 2006:131-153. 10. American Pain Society. Principles of analgesic use in the treatment of acute pain and cancer pain. 3rd ed. Skokie, IL: American Pain Society; 1999. 73 References 11. McCaffery M. Nursing Practice Theories Related To Cognition, Bodily Pain, And Man-Environment Interactions. Los Angeles, CA: UCLA; 1968. 12. (AHCPR). A.f.H.C.P.a.R. Acute Pain Management: Operative or Medical Procedures and Trauma. Clinical Practice Guideline. Rockville, MD: Public Health Service, U.S. Department of Health and Human Services; 1992. 13. Fink R, Gates R. Pain assessment. In: Ferrell BR, Coyle N, eds. Textbook of Palliative Nursing. 2nd ed. New York, NY: Oxford University Press; 2006:97-129. 14. Foley KM. Pain assessment and cancer pain syndromes. In: Doyle D, Hanks GWC, MacDonald N, eds. Oxford Textbook of Palliative Medicine. New York, NY: Oxford University Press: 2005: 298-316. 15. (AHCPR). A.f.H.C.P.a.R. Cancer Pain Management. Clinical Practice Guideline. Rockville, MD: Public Health Service, U.S. Department of Health and Human Services; 1994. 16. Bednash G, Ferrell BR. End-of-Life Nursing Education Consortium (ELNEC ). Washington, DC: Association of Colleges of Nursing; 2009. 74 References 17. Coyle N, Layman-Goldstein M. Pain assessment and pharmacological interventions. In: Matzo, ML, Sherman DW, eds. Palliative Care Nursing: Quality Care to the End of Life. 2nd New York, NY: Springer; 2006: 345-405 . 18. Emanuel L, von Gunten C, Ferris F. The Education for Physicians on End of Life Care (EPEC) Curriculum. Washington, DC: American Medical Association; 2003. 19. Mariano C. Holistic integrative therapies in palliative care. In: Matzo ML, Sherman DW, eds. Palliative Care Nursing: Quality Care to the End of Life. New York, NY: Springer; 2006: 51-86. 20. Stanley KJ, Zoloth-Dorman L. Ethical considerations. In: Ferrell BR, Coyle N, eds. Textbook of Palliative Nursing. 2nd ed. New York, NY: Oxford University Press; 2006: 1031-1053. 21. Emanuel L, von Gunten C, Ferris F. The Education for Physicians on End of Life Care (EPEC) Curriculum. Washington, DC: American Medical Association; 2003. 75 References 21. Emanuel L, von Gunten C, Ferris F. The Education for Physicians on End of Life Care (EPEC) Curriculum. Washington, DC: American Medical Association; 2003. 22. Mariano C. Holistic integrative therapies in palliative care. In: Matzo, ML, Sherman DW, eds. Palliative Care Nursing: Quality Care to the End of Life. New York, NY: Springer; 2006: 51-86. 23. Stanley KJ, Zoloth-Dorman L. Ethical considerations. In: Ferrell BR, Coyle N, eds. Textbook of Palliative Nursing. 2nd ed. New York, NY: Oxford University Press; 2006: 1031-1053. 24. Gorman L, Beach P, Ersek M, Montana B, Bartel J. Pain Position Statement. Pittsburgh, PA: Hospice and Palliative Nurses Association; 2003. 76 Questions? Please complete our survey! 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