Postoperative pain trajectory and opioid requirements after laparoscopic bariatric surgery: a single-centre historical cohort study.

IF 3.4 3区 医学 Q1 ANESTHESIOLOGY
Sinead Campbell, Rachel Chin, Wai-Man Liu, Urooj Siddiqui, Patti Kastanias, Ki Jinn Chin
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Abstract

Purpose: Concerns around delayed emergence and opioid-induced ventilatory impairment in bariatric surgery can lead to intraoperative reliance on short-acting opioids and avoidance of long-acting analgesics with potential sedative effects. Nevertheless, an overly-conservative intraoperative analgesic strategy may result in significant pain at emergence and higher opioid requirements in later phases of care. We sought to establish the pattern of intraoperative analgesic use in bariatric surgical patients as well as their postoperative pain trajectory and opioid requirements.

Methods: We undertook a single-centre historical cohort study. We explored associations between intraoperative analgesic interventions and pain scores and opioid requirements in postanesthesia care units (PACUs), and associations between the quality of analgesia at emergence and subsequent pain and patient-centred recovery outcomes.

Results: We extracted perioperative data for 939 patients who underwent bariatric metabolic surgery between January 2018 and October 2019. Only 39% of patients received long-acting opioids intraoperatively and there was minimal use of nonopioid analgesic adjuncts. Nearly 80% of patients reported moderate-to-severe pain on PACU arrival; 97% of patients received intravenous opioids for rescue analgesia (mean dose, 31 mg oral morphine equivalents). Lower pain scores at PACU admission and discharge were associated with subsequent lower inpatient pain scores, lower opioid requirements, shorter time to ambulation, and shorter length of hospital stay.

Conclusion: In bariatric surgical patients, effective intraoperative analgesic strategies that improve early pain control may have an impact on recovery and pain experience. Judicious use of intraoperative opioids coupled with opioid-sparing multimodal analgesic techniques should be considered and balanced against concerns regarding opioid-related adverse effects in this patient population.

Abstract Image

腹腔镜减肥手术后疼痛轨迹和阿片类药物需求:一项单中心历史队列研究。
目的:在减肥手术中,对延迟苏醒和阿片类药物引起的通气障碍的担忧可能会导致术中依赖短效阿片类药物,并避免使用具有潜在镇静作用的长效镇痛药。然而,过于保守的术中镇痛策略可能会导致术后出现明显疼痛,并在后期护理中产生更高的阿片类药物需求。我们试图确定减肥手术患者术中镇痛剂的使用模式及其术后疼痛轨迹和阿片类药物需求:我们进行了一项单中心历史队列研究。我们探讨了术中镇痛干预与麻醉后护理病房(PACU)疼痛评分和阿片类药物需求之间的关系,以及出院时镇痛质量与随后疼痛和以患者为中心的恢复结果之间的关系:我们提取了2018年1月至2019年10月期间接受减肥代谢手术的939名患者的围手术期数据。只有 39% 的患者在术中使用了长效阿片类药物,非阿片类镇痛辅助药物的使用率极低。近80%的患者在抵达PACU时报告有中度至重度疼痛;97%的患者接受了静脉注射阿片类药物进行抢救性镇痛(平均剂量为31毫克口服吗啡当量)。PACU入院和出院时较低的疼痛评分与随后较低的住院疼痛评分、较低的阿片类药物需求、较短的下地活动时间和较短的住院时间有关:结论:对减肥手术患者而言,有效的术中镇痛策略可改善早期疼痛控制,从而对患者的康复和疼痛体验产生影响。应考虑术中阿片类药物的审慎使用,并辅以阿片类药物稀释多模式镇痛技术,同时兼顾此类患者对阿片类药物相关不良反应的担忧。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
8.50
自引率
7.10%
发文量
161
审稿时长
6-12 weeks
期刊介绍: The Canadian Journal of Anesthesia (the Journal) is owned by the Canadian Anesthesiologists’ Society and is published by Springer Science + Business Media, LLM (New York). From the first year of publication in 1954, the international exposure of the Journal has broadened considerably, with articles now received from over 50 countries. The Journal is published monthly, and has an impact Factor (mean journal citation frequency) of 2.127 (in 2012). Article types consist of invited editorials, reports of original investigations (clinical and basic sciences articles), case reports/case series, review articles, systematic reviews, accredited continuing professional development (CPD) modules, and Letters to the Editor. The editorial content, according to the mission statement, spans the fields of anesthesia, acute and chronic pain, perioperative medicine and critical care. In addition, the Journal publishes practice guidelines and standards articles relevant to clinicians. Articles are published either in English or in French, according to the language of submission.
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