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What’s the definition of pain? Pain is a Sensory and Emotional experience associated with tissue damage or described in terms of such damage (I.A.S.P.) The Pain Pathways and Mechanisms Pain Pathways Frenchman Rene Descartes, De humine textbook Aß Fibers C Fibers Axon Reflex Np : Neuro-peptides, BV : Blood Vessels Physiology of the dorsal horn of the spinal cord Hyperalgesia And pain Threshold in humans Pain Management in the late 18th century Barker M.D. Different Pain management Modalities Pre-emptive Analgesia • • • • • Pre-emptive analgesia can be achieved by: local anesthetic infiltration of the skin Effective dose of systemic opioids Systemic nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) Neuroaxial opioids or local anesthetic Peripheral nerve blocks Patient Controlled Analgesia PCA 1. Increase patient satisfaction 2. Decrease side effects and complications 3. Decrease sedation 4. Decrease total amount of daily opioids 5. Avoid Basal rate in the Elderly 6. PCA Flowsheets Regional analgesia Isolated Extremity Injury Brachial plexus Anatomy Infraclavicular Approach Infraclavicular Approach Lower Extremity Injury Paravertebral Lumbar Somatic Nerve Block Femoral Nerve Block Sciatic Nerve Block Neuroaxial Blocks Opioid Spread after Epidural injection CSF Circulation Each of the four ventricles of the brain has a choroid plexus and CSF normally circulates between them: 1. The foramen of Monro is an opening from the lateral ventricle into the third ventricle 2. The aqueduct of Sylvius is the pathway of CSF flow between the third and fourth ventricles 3. The foramina (plural of "foramen") of Magendie and Luschka are openings from the fourth ventricle into the subarachnoid space around the base of the brain and upper spinal cord 4. The daily production is around 400-600 ml/ day 5. The reabsorption occurs over the surface of the brain and into the venous dural sinus drainage channels Spread of Opioids in CSF Pharmacokinatics of Epidural injection of Hydrophilic Drug Pharmacokinatics of Epidural Lipophilic Opioid Effects of Increased Pressure on Venous drainage “Pregnancy, Morbid obesity” Complications of Epidural Morphine Morphine concentration in Cervical CSF after lumbar Epidural injection Epidural Homodynamic Facts • Local anesthetics may cause vasodilatation and hypotension (Sympathectomy) • Narcotics dose not cause Hypotension • Not every post-op hypotension is related to Epidural analgesia. • Epidural analgesia promotes early mobilization • Nausea & vomiting response to small doses of Narcan or Zofran. Avoid Phenergan Tunneling Technique Adjuvant Therapy Nonsteroidals Conformational structure of COX-1 and COX-2 isozymes COX-1 (A) COX-2 (B) NSAID's • Blocks the production of Prostaglandin • Very effective in pain control, Alone or in Combination with Narcotics • Ketorolac is My drug of choice as an adjunct therapy in acute pain • Use p.o. forms “Cox2 inhibitors” when possible in combination with Epidural, IV,or oral narcotics Practical guide for NSAID’s Usage • Pre-op administration significantly decreases post-op pain and cramps • Toradol 30mg, IV or Celebrex 400mg, P.O. pre-op • For sever acute pain Celebrex 400mg, P.O. bid X one week the 200 P.O., bid. Bextra 20mg, bid X one week the 20mg, QD • PPI are the drugs of choice to treat gastric complications. H2 blockers only mask the disease • Please check the patient renal function routinely prior to administration • COX2 inhibitors doesn’t affect the platelet function Practical guide for NSAID’s Usage (Continuum) All specific or non-specific NSAID’s may cause: • water retention and edema • Hypertension • Renal dysfunction • May delay bony fusion in chronic usage ? Clonidine • Alpha2 agonist with outstanding properties when administered intrathecally: • Pain control properties by itself • Decrease the requirement of narcotics • Decrease tolerance • Great for neuropathic pain control • Adding 1mcg/kg for children caudal block will extend pain relief up to 24h Clonidine Oral or transdermal Clonidine: Enhance the effect of narcotics Decreases the daily narcotic requirement Excellent Adjuvant therapy for narcotic dependent patients Effective for neuropathic pain Coanalgesic Agents • • • • Anxiolytic drugs Anticonvulsants Antidepressants Ketamine Ketamine • NMDA receptors antagonist Neuropathic pain • Potent analgesic effect • Small doses in combination of opioids substantially improve pain control • Bolus dose of 100 mcg/kg followed by a continuous drip of 1-3 mcg/kg/min is ideal for chronic opioid users postoperatively Mechanisms of Anti-Epileptic Drugs in Pain Usage of Anti-Epileptic Drugs in Acute Pain • Every surgical incisional pain has Neuropathic component • Studies showed giving 1200 mg of Gabapentin 1 h prior to surgery decreases the opioids requirement post-op and results in better pain control without increased sedation • Combining Gabapentin with opioids is ideal for re-do back surgery cases with chronic opioids usage • These class of drugs are also mode stabilizers Non Chemical Techniques • Psychological treatments: Relaxation, hypnosis Cognitive therapy etc.. • TENS Units • Physiotherapy Pain Management Algorithm Trauma pain management Algorithm Head injury patients Clear mental status Unclear mental status Treat with any modalities Small doses of opioids(codeine) or/with Ketorolac Trauma pain management Algorithm Extremity injury Bone injury Peripheral nerve or vascular injury Epidural analgesia opioids or local anesthetics Nerve function monitoring yes Epidural analgesia Opioids only No PCA Epidural opioids with or without local anesthetics Peripheral nerve block Trauma pain management Algorithm Abdominal injury Surgery required Surgery not rquired Epidural analgesia PCA Trauma Pain Management Algorithm Neurologic injuries Spinal cord injury Neuropathic nerve injury PCA CRPS I CRPS II Epidural analgesia with local anesthetics (Very effective) PO/IV Narcotics Antidepressants Anticonvulsants Trauma pain management Algorithm Thoracic trauma Intubated patients IV narcotics PCA Not Intubated patients Thoracic epidural analgesia Ready for extubation Thoracic epidural analgesia Intercostal nerve block PCA Intercostal nerve block PCA Pharmacokinatic model of Spinal injection of Hydrophilic Opioid Referred Pain PUBLICATIONS ON ACCELERATED OR MULTIMODAL POSTOPERATIVE REHABILITATION PROGRAMS Reference Bardram et al: eight elderly highrisk patients, stress-free (i.e., laparoscopic) colonic resection [8] Moiniche et al: uncontrolled pilot investigation, 17 patients, open colonic resection [111] Liu et al: 54 patients, four groups, partial colectomy [95] Collier: 186 patients, care pathway for elective carotid endarterectomy [29] Intervention Findings Combination of laparoscopic surgery, epidural analgesia, early oral nutrition, and early mobilization Pain relief → early mobilization in elderly patients → accelerated recovery; hospital stay: 2 d Combined epidural–general anesthesia, epidural analgesia, no nasogastric tube, oral feeding in 24 h, early mobilization VAS 0 at rest, minimal with mobilization; normal defecation in 12 patients within 48 h; median hospital stay: 5 d Multimodal recovery program Epidural analgesia: superior; earlier recovery of gastrointestinal function but more orthostatic hypotension; epidural bupivacaine combined with morphine: best balance of analgesia and side effects Preoperative education, same-day admission, regional anesthesia, selective use of ICU 10% ICU admission; 157 patients discharged on first postoperative day; average stay: 1.27 d; costsavings $3000 per patient PUBLICATIONS ON ACCELERATED OR MULTIMODAL POSTOPERATIVE REHABILITATION PROGRAMS References Intervention Findings Moiniche et al: [112] 13 patients, hip replacement pilot investigation Epidural analgesia (bupivacaine-morphine), ibuprofen, intensive mobilization regime 11 patients ready for discharge on day 6, 2 patients discharged on day 9 (usual hospitalization was 13 d) Pedersen et al: [126] prospective study, breast surgery, questionnaires from 373 patients Standardized clinical protocols, support from senior management, expanded educational resources for patients Length of stay: 39% decrease; patient volume: up 22%; low incidence of surgical complications, high patient acceptance Weingarten et al: [173] retrospective study, 230 patients, total hip replacement Practice guideline: 5-d postoperative stay in low-risk patients Practice guideline can reduce hospital length of stay from 8.4 to 5.9 d Bardram et al: [8] eight elderly high-risk patients, stress-free (i.e., laparoscopic) colonic resection Combination of laparoscopic surgery, epidural analgesia, early oral nutrition, and early mobilization Pain relief → early mobilization in elderly patients → accelerated recovery; hospital stay: 2 d Moiniche et al: [111] uncontrolled pilot investigation, 17 patients, open colonic resection Combined epidural–general anesthesia, epidural analgesia, no nasogastric tube, oral feeding in 24 h, early mobilization VAS 0 at rest, minimal with mobilization; normal defecation in 12 patients within 48 h; median hospital stay: 5 d Multimodal recovery program Epidural analgesia: superior; earlier recovery of gastrointestinal function but more orthostatic hypotension; epidural bupivacaine combined with morphine: best balance of analgesia and side effects Liu et al: [95] 54 patients, four groups, partial colectomy