Pain and analgaesia
Appearance
Pain
[edit | edit source]'an unpleasant sensory and emotional experience associated with actual or potential tissue damage, or described in terms of such damage.'
- Physiological pain:
- Nociceptive
- Inflammatory
- Pathological/maladaptive pain:
- Neuropathic
Pathophysiology
[edit | edit source]- Transduction - noxious agent stimulates free nerve endings (nociceptors)
- Transmission - signal travels via nerve pathways - A and C fibres, in the spinothalamic and thalamocortical tracts
- Modulation - repression or enhancement of signal occurs in the dorsal horn of the spinal cord
- Perception - pain signal reaches cerebral cortex
Strategies to reduce pain
- Education
- Reduce anxiety by discussing likely post-operative pain levels and course beforehand
- Set realistic expectations
- Encourage early rehabilitation
- Prevention
- Various strategies to minimise tissue disruption
- Pre-emptive analgaesia
- Post-operative regional blocks/LA
- Multimodal analgaesia
- LA
- Regional anaesthesia - epidural, regional block, spinal
Approach to seeing a post-op patient in pain
[edit | edit source]- Review physiological status and operative details
- Review medication chart
- Discuss with ward nurses
- Review and discuss with the patient
- Exclude a new problem, including ischaemia, bleeding, anastomotic leak and compartment syndrome
- Airway - ensure no sedation or high-risk features
- Breathing - RR and sats
- Circulation
- Disability - check LoC
- Use SOCRATES or similar to characterise pain
- Consider possibilities:
- Inadequate medication or dosage?
- Incorrect technique used?
- Unrecognised complication?
- Other supplemental techniques are not used appropriately?
Management options:
[edit | edit source]- Analgaesic medications
- Oral
- SC/IM
- IV
- PCA
- Bolus
- Regional anaesthetic techniques
- Spinal/epidural
- Peripheral nerve block
- LA
Paracetamol
[edit | edit source]- Analgaesic and anti-pyretic
- Exact mechanism of action not fully understood
- Metabolised by the liver
- May need to adjust dose in hepatic impairment or underweight patients
- No significant benefit to IV over PO
- 1g q6h is the usual dose
- In patients <50kg, give 15mg/kg/day
NSAIDs
[edit | edit source]- Inhibit prostaglandin synthesis by inhibiting the enzyme cyclo-oxygenase
- Contraindications
- Allergy including asthma
- Previous CABG and cardiovascular disease in general
- Pregnancy especially third trimester
- GI bleeding/gastritis
- Previous bariatric surgery
- CKD/AKI
- Diseases that impair platelet activity
- Orthopaedic injuries
Opioids
[edit | edit source]- Derived from opium alkaloids
- Act on mu-opioid receptors
- Adverse effects:
- Nausea/vomiting
- Constipation
- Pruritis
- Bladder retention
- Drowsiness and respiratory depression
Co-analgaesics
[edit | edit source]- Anticonvulsants - gabapentin
- Antidepressants - amitriptyline
- Ketamine