key concepts in acute pain management - 2 surgery residents nov. 15, 2011
DESCRIPTION
KEY CONCEPTS IN ACUTE PAIN MANAGEMENT - 2 SURGERY RESIDENTS Nov. 15, 2011. John Penning MD FRCPC Director Acute Pain Service The Ottawa Hospital. Objectives. Review the “new” acute pain ladder When step # 3 on the ladder isn’t working? - PowerPoint PPT PresentationTRANSCRIPT
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KEY CONCEPTS IN ACUTE PAIN MANAGEMENT - 2SURGERY RESIDENTS Nov. 15, 2011
John Penning MD FRCPC
Director Acute Pain Service
The Ottawa Hospital
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Objectives Review the “new” acute pain ladder When step # 3 on the ladder isn’t working?
– Pronociception, glial activation??– Role of anti-hyperalgesic drugs
Fundamentals of IV PCA What is an epidural anyway? Epidural pitfalls for the surgeon Review principles discussed by case
presentation– Opioid tolerance, conversion from IV to PO– When, how to use naloxone– Assessing the hypotensive epidural patient
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Multi-modal Analgesia Orders
Celecoxib 100 – 200 mg PO Q12H or
Naproxen 250 – 375 mg PO Q8HAvailable OTC as “Aleve” 220 mg
Acetaminophen 650 mg PO Q4H Tramadol 25 – 50 – 75 mg PO Q4H prn Hydromorphone 1 – 2 mg PO Q4H prn
To supplement Tramadol if required
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Case Problem:32 yr. Male with multiple ribs # Patient previously healthy, MVA with no other
injuries. In Trauma Unit, c/o 9/10 pain. Difficultly
breathing due to severe splinting.Analgesic orders are: Hydromorphone 2 – 4 mg PO Q4H prn or 1 – 2 mg SC Q4H prnNurse just gave 1 mg S/C one hour ago and
now won’t give anything for 3 hours!What do you do?
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Case Problem:32 yr. Male with multiple ribs #
Review of PHx reveals no drug use.
Patient has received total of 3 mg hydromorphone sc in the 6 hours since admission.
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Case Problem:32 yr. Male with multiple ribs #Acetaminophen 650 mg PO Q4H W/A
Ketorolac 30 mg IV stat followed by 10 mg IV Q4H.
Tramadol 50 – 75 mg PO Q4H
Hydromorphone 1 – 2 mg s.c. Q2H prn
Hydromorphone 0.5 - 1 mg IV Q1H prn
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Case Problem:32 yr. Male with multiple ribs #
You are at the top of the analgesic ladder and the patient still has inadequate control of acute pain.
With more pain is more opioid always the answer?
NO! Why?? The problem likely is HYPERALGESIA
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Scientific American Nov 2009. Pg. 54. Douglas Fields
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E = MC2
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Nociceptive Stimulus Pain
Hyperalgesia
Analgesia
Pro-nociceptive modulation
Anti-nociceptive modulation
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Analgesic Drugs that act by Nociceptive Modulation
Pro-antinociceptive– Augments inhibitory modulation of
nociception i.e opioids
Anti-pronociceptive– Inhibits the facilitatory modulation of
nociception i.e. ketamine, gabapentin and pregabalin
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Grande et al. Anesth and Analg Oct 08
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NMDA Receptor Antagonists -To prevent or reverse “pathological” acute pain
Ketamine, Dextromethorphan– Ketamine is widely known as a dissociative
“general anesthetic” - 3 mg/Kg IV bolus– Ketamine 2.5 - 5.0 mg IV bolus for
analgesia in post-op patient - – Ketamine as co-analgesic - combined
0.5:1 with hydromorphone IV PCA. Better analgesia, less S/E
– Dextromethorphan 30 mg PO Q8H available OTC as Benylin DM, 3 mg/ml.
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Case Problem:32 yr. Male with multiple ribs #
IV PCA with hydromorphone / ketamine
Ketorolac changed to naproxen when eating. 250 mg PO Q8H
Or Celecoxib 200 mg PO Q12H for 5 days
then 100 mg Q12H until no longer needed.
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Case Problem:32 yr. Male with multiple ribs #
On day three patient is doing well and planning for D/C tomorrow.
Convert to PO hydromorphone.Daily IV PCA use is 20 mg per day.Equals about 40 mg per day orally.Order about 50% as long acting.9 mg HM Contin Q12H and 2 – 4 mg PO
Q4H prn.
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Case Problem:32 yr. Male with multiple ribs #
Weaning instructions:
As daily “breakthough” hydromorphone requirements decrease, reduce the HM Contin dose by 25% increments.
The NSAID or coxib is D/C after the opioids D/C
Acetaminophen is last to be D/C
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Analgesic Drugs that act by Nociceptive Modulation
Anti-pronociceptive– Inhibits the facilitatory modulation of
nociception i.e. ketamine, gabapentin and pregabalin, lidocaine
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Pregabalin for acute pain?
Acute pain is “off-label” use Be cautious of Over-sedation
– Sleep deprivation– Elderly– Patient already has significant opioids
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Pregabalin: The Good, The Bad and the Ugly The Good
– Chronic pain in region of surgery, when pronociceptive mechanisms play a role such as joint arthroplasty, bowel surgery in IBD patients, chronic limb ischemic pain, opioid tolerant patients
The Bad– Mild pain when simple analgesics like
acetaminophen, NSAIDs or low dose opioid or tramadol suffice.
The Ugly– Too large a dose in sleep deprived patient already
in state of “morphine-failure”
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Pregabalin dosage
This is NOT a one size fits all.– Drugs binding to receptors have
considerable patient to patient variability in dose:response
Alpha-2 delta sub-unit of Voltage-Gated Calcium Channel
75 mg PO 2 hours pre-op (50 – 150) 50 mg PO Q8H for 3 to 5 days (25 – 75)
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The New Challenges in Managing Acute Pain after Surgery and Trauma
The Opioid Tolerant Patient– The greatest change in practice/attitudes in
the last 10 years is the now wide spread acceptance of the use of opioids for CHRONIC NON-MALIGNANT PAIN
– Renders the “usual” standard “box” orders totally inadequate in these patients
Get a pre-op Anesthesia/APS consult– The Brief Pain Inventory – “BPI”
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Eipe and Penning2009
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Opioid Conversions – total daily ORAL dose equivalents
Tramadol 500 mg Tapentadol 250 mg Morphine 100 mg Oxycodone 50 mg Hydromorphone 20 mg
Fentanyl patch 25 mcg/hr
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The surgeon and IV PCA?
Hydromorphone opioid of choice – (0.5 mg/ml)– Less active metabolites than morphine– Better tolerated in renal
insufficiency/elderly– Safety? In setting of having both available
it is better to be more familiar with HM (substitution errors) i.e. want to avoid giving HM at the morphine dose!
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The surgeon and IV PCA?
Loading dose required– HM: 0.03 mg/kg, 2 mg in 70 kg
Bolus dose– HM: 0.2 mg (0.1 – 0.4)
Lock-out interval – 6 minutes Continuous infusion
– Not always required: (0 – 0.2 mg/hr) One hour limit - ( 1.6 mg)
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Naloxone, a two-edged sword!
Is there a down side to the administration of naloxone, 0.4 mg IV in the post-op patient where opioid induced respiratory depression is suspected?
Severe acute pain, sympathetic response, pulmonary edema, MI, dysrhythmias
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Case Presentation: Somnolence and hypoxemia while on IV PCA hydromorphone
65 yr. Female with large ventral hernia repair on IV PCA hydromorphone
PMHx: Angioplasty 9 yr. ago, MI, CHF in past– Moderate COPD, NIDDM
Doing well day 1, but day 2 found to be somewhat confused, somnolent and SaO2 remains in high 80s despite Oxygen by N/P
Is Narcan Indicated? Urgently?
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Case Presentation: Somnolence and hypoxemia while on IV PCA Hydromorphone
Further patient evaluation– Patient arousable, RR 8-16, pupils slightly
constricted, BP 130/70, pulse 90 and reg.– Chest: A/E fair bil. And some mild basilar
creps– ABG: pH 7.46 pCO2 50 pO2 55 BiCarb 36
FiO2 > .50– Chest X-ray: Extensive bilateral, diffuse,
interstitial infiltrate consistent with ARDS Naloxone would probably have had a serious
adverse effect on this patient. Hypoxemia despite supplemental O2 in a breathing patient. Look beyond the Opioids!
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Case Presentation: Somnolence and hypoxemia while on IV PCA Hydromorphone
Management of suspected opioid induced respiratory depression– Support A/W– Simulate breathing– Supply supplemental oxygen– Assess SaO2, BP, Pulse– Naloxone titration, IF INDICATED
• 0.04 mg Q5 min. X 3 as needed
Hypoxemia is a medical emergency Hypercarbia is NOT
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OpioidsIssueWith parenteral opioids the patient may experience intolerable side
effects before adequate analgesia is attained
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Opioids
CONCEPT
Targeted regional
administration of opioid
results in enhancement of
the therapeutic index (ratio
of analgesia/side effects)
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Neuraxial Opioids – the good
Intrathecal morphine– simple technique– potent analgesia for 12 -16 hrs.– highly effective for pain in lower abdomen
and lower limbs
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Neuraxial Opioids – adverse effects
Risk of delayed onset of respiratory depression, peaks at 6 hours
Urinary retention >50% for 16 hours Pruritus, is not an allergy
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What is an “EPIDURAL”? Anatomical
– Location of the catheter, C7 – L5• Cervical, thoracic and lumbar epidurals• Segmental Blockade
Drugs– Opioids (hydrophillic vs. lipophillic)
• morphine, hydromorphone, demerol, fentanyl• Hydrophillic drugs migrate rostrally and also
yield greater spinal selectivity
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What is an “EPIDURAL”?
Drugs– Local Anesthetics :
• Lidocaine, bupivacaine, ropivacaineVarying concentrations/drug mass produces“Differential Blockade”
sympathetics > somatosensory > motor– Adjuncts: epinephrine
– Mode of Drug Delivery– Intermittent bolus vs. continuous infusions
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True or False? Epidural analgesia impairs the
resolution of post-operative ileus i.e. it “slows down the gut” delaying return of normal bowel function.
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Epidural analgesia and recovery of bowel motililty??
Thoracic placement of epidural with the administration of local anesthesic and minimal opioid will promote bowel recovery via sympathetic blockade
If the primary mode of epidural analgesia is via potent opioid, recovery of motility may be delayed.
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True or False?
Epidural analgesia necessitates a foley catheter until the epidural is removed.
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What about epidurals and the foley catheter??
Less Urinary Tract Infection by Earlier Removal of Bladder Catheter in Surgical Patients Receiving Thoracic Epidural Analgesia.
Zaouter C, Kaneva P, Carli F (McGill)
Regional Anesthesia and Pain Medicine Nov-Dec 2009 pp. 542-552.
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Epidural Pit-falls for the Surgeon
Epidural hematoma– > 50 reported cases in USA in patients treated
with LMWH– Epidural insertion and removal of the catheter – Risk factors: Elderly, low body weight, twice daily
dosing, anti-coagulation vs. prophylactic dose range
The decision to fully anti-coagulate a patient with an epidural in-situ should be made in consultation with anesthesia and thrombosis medicine
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Epidural Pit-falls for the Surgeon More epidural hematoma risks!!
– Heparin 5000 units s.c. Q8H for thromboprophyllaxis??
This is full clinical anti-coagulation for some patients!
Once daily LMWH at thromboprophyllactic dose is safer.
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What about anti-platelet agents?
Plavix– ASRA guidelines state no neuraxial anesthesia or
epidural catheters implemented until D/C for 7 days –
– Plavix may be started 12 – 24 hour after neuraxial block or catheter removal
– concensus only, speculative– Obviously risk is much lower than with
heparin/coumadin since reports are extremely rare– New agents on horizon??
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Epidural Pit-falls for the Surgeon
“Masked-Mischief”– The potential high efficacy of the modality could
block pain related to complications• Peritonitis; anastomosis dehiscence• Wound infection, wound hematoma• Limb ischemia, compartment syndrome
– Delay in appropriate therapy, diagnosis• Neurological problems inappropriately attributed
to the epidural i.e. anterior spinal artery syndrome
• Hypovolemia
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The “Hypotensive” Patient with an Epidural64 yr. female, 48 kg, with no Hx of CVS problems, had
an esophagectomy for cancer with combined GA/epidural anesthesia.
Later that evening you are called because the patient’s BP is 85/50.
Epidural at T5/6 and running hydromorphone 10 µg/ml in 0.1% bupivacaine with epinephrine 2 mcg/ml at 8 ml/hr
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The “Hypotensive” Patient with an Epidural
Possibilities? “Normal” for this patient
– all is well and confirmed by Hx and absence of postural changes in BP or HR
– vascular patients may have marked discrepancy between arms – establish baseline pre-op
Surgical complications Medical complications Side-effect of Epidural induced sympathetic block
– decreased venous return and decreased SVR Combination of any 4 above
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Is the Epidural causing the hypotension?
What drugs have been administered epidurally? Pure opioids: morphine, hydromorphone,
fentanyl– sympathetics not blocked directly so look for
another cause Demerol
– mild direct sympatholytic effect and some systemic effects in large doses. Rarely cause of significant Hypotension. Be careful to R/O other causes.
Local Anesthetics +/- opioids– In a euvolemic patient with normal CVS function
hypotension is unlikely if < 8 sensory dermatomes blocked
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Is the Epidural Local Anesthetic causing the hypotension?
Intrathecal catheter migration
Inadvertent overdose
“Un-masking” of problem with the patient.
“Sensitive” patient
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Is the Epidural Local Anesthetic causing the hypotension?
Management ABCs
– supplemental O2, fluid bolus, elevate legs– ephedrine 5 mg or phenylephrine 50 µg IV bolus– Hold the epidural infusion
Quantify the extent of block– motor block? Thoracic epidural?, that’s a problem!– Sensory block (cold, sharp)
• In a euvolemic patient with normal CVS function hypotension is unlikely if < 8 sensory dermatomes blocked
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Management of Hypotension Cont’d High thoracic epidural blockade may block the
compensatory tachycardia response to hypovolemia.– Cardio-accelerator sympathetic nerve fibres arise
from T1 - T4– sympathetic block may extend several dermatomes
above the sensory blockade Correct the underlying cause Remove bupicacaine and change to epidural
hydromorphone if patient remains hemodynamically unstable
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36 yr. Open Cholecystectomy patient experiencing difficulty weaning from IV PCA
Endometriosis, fibromyalgia and chronic low back pain- has been on Tylenol #3 for several years- functions well and stable usage of 8-10/day
Day 3 post-op Tylenol #3, 2 tabs Q4h started and IV PCA D/C
Patient c/o severe pain, not able to go home
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36 yr. Open Cholecystectomy patient experiencing difficulty weaning from IV PCA
Review of APS meds– Acetaminophen 650 mg Q4H– Naproxen 250 mg Q8H– Pregabalin 50 mg Q8H– Tramadol 50 mg Q4H– Plus using 20 mg IV HM in last 24 hr.
Continue above A/N/P/T plus will likely require about 40 mg daily HM PO (4 – 6 mg PO Q4H prn)
Plan for transition back to Fam MD
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Conclusion: Key Concepts
The foundation of all acute pain Rx protocols is NSAIDS and acetaminophen.
Codeine is a “pro-drug”. Problems may occur with under or over conversion to morphine
Tramadol to be considered as second step in the acute pain ladder
Naloxone can be a dangerous drug, careful titration is almost always possible
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Conclusions
Inadequate analgesia despite cyclo-oxygenase inhibitors and opioids?– Think “Hyperalgesia”– Consider an anti-hyperalgesic like
ketamine, pregabalin All epidurals are not equivalent Epidural pitfalls
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Useful texts
Free!! From Canadian Pain Society
Managing Pain: The Canadian Healthcare Professional’s Reference. Edited by Roman Jovey. 2008.
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http://www.anzca.edu.au/publications/acutepain.pdf
The above web site has the entire document and is freely Available to download.
ACUTE PAIN MANAGEMENT:SCIENTIFIC EVIDENCE 3nd Edition Feb ‘10Australian and New Zealand College of AnaesthetistsAnd Faculty of Pain Medicine.
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Useful websites on Pain
Prospect:Procedure Specific Post-op Pain Management
http://www.postoppain.org/frameset.htm Pain Explained
http://www.painexplained.ca/content.asp?node=4 The Canadian Pain Society
http://www.canadianpainsociety.ca/indexenglish.html
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Useful websites on Pain
Pain Institute http://www.medscape.com/infosite/paininstitute/article-5?src=0_0_ad_ldr Internation Association for the Study of Pain
http://www.iasp-pain.org//AM/Template.cfm?Section
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