儿科肿瘤疼痛的叙述性回顾:程序和手术疼痛的阿片类药物选择。

IF 3.4 3区 医学 Q1 PEDIATRICS
Elizabeth A Hall, Chasity M Shelton, Tracy M Hagemann, Hilary M Jasmin, Karissa Grey, Doralina L Anghelescu
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引用次数: 0

摘要

这篇叙述性综述探讨了阿片类药物在控制儿科肿瘤患者手术和外科疼痛中不断演变的作用。综述评估了各种肿瘤手术中阿片类药物使用的研究,包括胸腔、腹腔、骨科和神经外科手术,以及骨髓抽吸和腰椎穿刺等常见疼痛手术。虽然阿片类药物对儿科肿瘤患者的急性手术和术后疼痛治疗仍然很重要,但人们越来越重视多模式、节省阿片类药物的方法。本综述中提供的证据突出表明,人们越来越重视术后阿片类药物的明智使用,以降低不良反应、持续使用或潜在滥用的风险。综述综合了各种镇痛方案的研究结果,包括硬膜外镇痛和外周神经阻滞等区域麻醉技术的使用,这些技术在减少阿片类药物需求方面表现出了良好的前景。对于手术疼痛,综述探讨了阿片类药物与咪达唑仑或异丙酚等镇静剂联合使用的疗效,以及氯胺酮作为阿片类药物替代品的潜力。主要研究结果表明,阿片类药物稀释技术可有效减少阿片类药物的总体用量,同时不会影响疼痛控制或患者满意度。多项研究表明,区域麻醉技术和非阿片类辅助药物可显著降低各种外科手术的术后阿片类药物需求量。对于手术疼痛,以氯胺酮为基础的方案通常显示出与以阿片类药物为基础的方法相当或更优的疼痛控制效果,一些研究还报告了更好的患者满意度。本综述还探讨了术后定制阿片类药物处方的重要性,一些研究提出了更准确预测门诊患者阿片类药物需求的算法。这些方法旨在确保充分的疼痛控制,同时最大限度地减少阿片类药物的过量使用。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
A Narrative Review of Pain in Pediatric Oncology: The Opioid Option for Procedural and Surgical Pain.

This narrative review examines the evolving role of opioids in managing procedural and surgical pain in pediatric oncology patients. The review evaluates studies on opioid use across various oncological surgeries including thoracic, abdominal, orthopedic, and neurosurgical procedures, as well as for common painful procedures such as bone marrow aspirations and lumbar punctures. While opioids remain important for acute procedural and postoperative pain management in pediatric oncology patients, there is an increasing emphasis on multimodal, opioid-sparing approaches. The evidence presented within this review highlights the growing focus on judicious postoperative opioid prescribing to mitigate risks of adverse effects and persistent use or potential misuse. The review synthesizes findings from studies investigating various analgesic regimens, including the use of regional anesthesia techniques like epidural analgesia and peripheral nerve blocks, which have shown promise in reducing opioid requirements. For procedural pain, the review explores the efficacy of combining opioids with sedatives like midazolam or propofol, as well as the potential of ketamine as an opioid-sparing alternative. Key findings indicate that opioid-sparing techniques can effectively reduce overall opioid consumption without compromising pain control or patient satisfaction. Several studies demonstrated that regional anesthesia techniques and non-opioid adjuncts can significantly lower postoperative opioid requirements across various surgical procedures. For procedural pain, ketamine-based regimens often showed comparable or superior pain control to opioid-based approaches, with some studies reporting better patient satisfaction. This review also addresses the importance of tailored postoperative opioid prescribing, with some studies presenting algorithms to predict outpatient opioid needs more accurately. These approaches aim to ensure adequate pain control while minimizing excess opioid dispensing.

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来源期刊
Pediatric Drugs
Pediatric Drugs PEDIATRICS-PHARMACOLOGY & PHARMACY
CiteScore
7.20
自引率
0.00%
发文量
54
审稿时长
>12 weeks
期刊介绍: Pediatric Drugs promotes the optimization and advancement of all aspects of pharmacotherapy for healthcare professionals interested in pediatric drug therapy (including vaccines). The program of review and original research articles provides healthcare decision makers with clinically applicable knowledge on issues relevant to drug therapy in all areas of neonatology and the care of children and adolescents. The Journal includes: -overviews of contentious or emerging issues. -comprehensive narrative reviews of topics relating to the effective and safe management of drug therapy through all stages of pediatric development. -practical reviews covering optimum drug management of specific clinical situations. -systematic reviews that collate empirical evidence to answer a specific research question, using explicit, systematic methods as outlined by the PRISMA statement. -Adis Drug Reviews of the properties and place in therapy of both newer and established drugs in the pediatric population. -original research articles reporting the results of well-designed studies with a strong link to clinical practice, such as clinical pharmacodynamic and pharmacokinetic studies, clinical trials, meta-analyses, outcomes research, and pharmacoeconomic and pharmacoepidemiological studies. Additional digital features (including animated abstracts, video abstracts, slide decks, audio slides, instructional videos, infographics, podcasts and animations) can be published with articles; these are designed to increase the visibility, readership and educational value of the journal’s content. In addition, articles published in Pediatric Drugs may be accompanied by plain language summaries to assist readers who have some knowledge of, but not in-depth expertise in, the area to understand important medical advances.
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