4. Background
Chronic Pain
• Lasts longer than 3-6 months
• Serves no purpose
• Cannot identify a cause
• Can lead to pain behaviors
• Very difficult to treat
5. Pain Conduction
•Injury triggers release of bio-chemicals
•Inflammation takes place
•Stimulation of nerve fibers
•Bio-chemicals causes pain impulses to
begin
6. Pain Perception
•Impulse is sent to the brain via ascending
tracts in spinal cord
•Neurotransmitters released by C fibers
(substance P)
•Message to the brain (Thalamus)
•Sends message down descending
pathway= pain response
7. Why Pain Control
•Persistent acute postoperative pain:
•Decreases the body’s physiologic
reserves
•May exacerbate co-morbid conditions
(e.g.) increase risk of MI in patients with
CAD
•Contributes to pulmonary complications.
8. •Impairs rehabilitation and functional
outcome
• May lead to development of chronic pain
syndromes and long-term disability.
• Increases hospital stay and the cost of
patient care
• Decreases patient satisfaction.
9. Metabolic Stress Response
•Surgical insult results in post op pain
•Increased circulating catecholamines
•Resulting in tachycardia and hypertension
•Leading to increased cardiac work
•Resulting in increased myocardial oxygen
consumption
13. Pre Op Assessment
•Indication for surgical procedure
•Allergies and intolerances to medications,
anesthesia, or other agents
•Known medical problems
•Surgical history
•Trauma (major)
•Current medications (incl.OTC herbal &
dietary supplements,and illicit drugs)
Gayatri,P (2005). Post-op pain services. Indian J. Anaesth. 49 (1) : 17-19
14. •Discuss History of Acute or Chronic Pain
•Identify history of pain control methods
•What has worked
•How long on pain meds
•Do they work
•True allergies, ask what happens
15. •Differentiate between tolerance and
physical dependence
•Discuss pain management problems
(ie) anxiolytic therapy with pain meds
Identify if there is a need to wean from any
pain medications prior to surgery
•Do not stop suddenly
16. •Consider Patients with:
•Multiple back operations
•Abdominal pain patients (ie) Crohn’s
disease
•Recurrent cancer
•Chronic joint pain, (ie) RA or DJD
17. •If with a history of chronic opioid use for
pain management may require higher
doses for pain control
•This will include using PCA and/or meds
for break through pain
•May not get adequate relief with
“standard” doses of “standard” post op
pain orders
18. • Do a directed pain history
• Type of pain
• Location, description, duration,
exacerbation and relieving factors
• Directed pain examination
• Discussion of post-op pain control plan
19. •Evaluate each patient individually
•Do not assume that aging is the same in
all patients
•Evaluate for side effects of narcotics
•Need complete list of meds to check for
interactions
What about the Elderly
20. •Dispel myths
• Concerns about opioids
• Concerns about addiction
• Fear of tolerance
• Age related expectation of pain
21. Pre Op Teaching
Educate patient/family/staff
• Pain plan
• How & when to evaluate
•Use of alternative methods of pain control
•Patient and/or Family education on use of
PCA
22. •Explain blocks !!!!!!
•Provide pre-anesthetic evaluation,
brochures, and videotapes to educate
patients about therapeutic options (music
and/or guided imagery, other)
23. Preoperative Preparation of the Patient
Instruct on bedside postoperative
evaluation
Include instruction in behavioral
modalities to control anxiety
Distraction, deep breathing,
visualization (etc)
24. Preoperative Preparation of the Patient
Instruct on pain ranking tools prior to
surgery
Use age appropriate tools, why, when
and how to be used.
Instruct S.O., parents if needed.
May want to use personalized tool
(i.e.Randall)
25. •Generally there is decreased cardiac and
pulmonary reserve with increased age
•Opioids may produce confusion or cause
some delirium postoperatively in some
patients
•An elderly patient taking six medications
is likely to have adverse reactions 14 times
more than a younger person taking the
same number of medications.
26. •Consider additive respiratory depressant
effect of both opiates and anxiolytics
•Most elderly patients metabolize drugs at
a slower rate and may require less-
frequent dosing or a reduction in dosage
•Certain medications should be avoided in
elderly patients, based on their adverse
effects
•(Beers list)
27. •Sedative effects with an increased risk of
falls
•Constipation related to opiates & NSAIDS
• May have reduced gastrointestinal
motility
•Stool softener with stimulant
•Start pain meds at a lower dose and
increase to pain relief if opioid naive
28. Special Populations
Pediatrics
• Use pain scales specific to age
• FLACC (pre-op instruction)
• Observe frequently
• Medication dose wt specific
• Guided Imagery
• Distraction
• Music/video
30. Special Populations
Special needs:
• Identify what works for this patient
• Ask the family or caregiver
• Comfort frequently
• If non verbal anticipate painful
procedures result in pain
• Again be an advocate
31. Cultural Considerations
• Be aware of specific needs and
beliefs
• Respect the patient/family tradition
• Internalize (how would I feel if)
• Do not pre judge
• Explain need for pain control
32. Intra Op Consideration
•Therapy selected should reflect the
individual needs of the patient.
•Ability to recognize and treat adverse
effects during surgery
•Special caution during continuous
infusion modalities
•Drug accumulation may contribute to
adverse events
33. •Patients who are pretreated with pain
meds, anxiolytics or NSAIDS prior to
surgery
•Have a greater decrease in postoperative
pain
•Decrease in postoperative anxiety
•Olorunto,W & Galandiuk, S. 2006. Managing the Spectrum of Surgical Pain:
•Acute Management of the Chronic Pain Patient. American College of Surgeons
34. •Surgeries to upper abdominal and
thoracic areas associated with severe pain
can lead to:
• Restrictive lung defect
• Depressed diaphragmatic activity
Gayatri,P (2005). Post-op pain services. Indian J. Anaesth. 49 (1) : 17-19
35. Study:
•Early and aggressive use of pain
medications after surgery results in
shorter hospital stays, fewer chronic pain
problems later, and use less pain
medication overall than people who avoid
pain medication.
Taylor, M. (2001).Managing postoperative pain. Hosp Med; 62: 560-563.
36. Intra Op Consideration
•Patient Advocate
•Continue to assess for anxiety/pain
•Provide comfort
Positioning
Guided imagery
Music
38. •The risk of addiction to pain medication is
low for patients using such medications for
post-surgical pain
•Addictive personality leads to addiction
•Dependency is another issue
39. Effective Pain Control
Listen to the patient
• Believe the patient’s pain ranking
Support the patient/family
• Answer questions
• Provide information
Instruct re: need for pain control
40. •Acute nociceptive pain from incision.
• Musculoskeletal pain from abnormal
body positioning and immobility during and
after surgery
• Neuropathic pain from excessive
stretching or direct trauma to peripheral
nerves
Sources of postoperative pain
41. Post Operative Pain Control
Decreases risk of
• Myocardial ischemia
• Tachycardia and dysrhythmia
• Impaired wound healing
• Atelectasis
• Thromboembolic events
• Peripheral vasoconstriction
42. Post Operative Pain
Near the surgical site.
•Acute exacerbation of pain may be added
to the basal pain
•Increases with activities such as
coughing, turning, dressing changes
•Generally self limiting
•Progressive improvement over a relatively
short period
43. With Special Populations
• Geriatric
• Be aware of renal/hepatic function
• Sensitivities/allergies
• Be pro-active with medication
• Opioids
• Combination meds
• Be aware of drugs to be avoided in the
elderly
44. ASSESS & RE-ASSESS
• Before and after pain medications
• Put it in the patient’s own words
• Assess for non verbal cues
• Be aware of special needs of the
cognitively impaired patient
• Use appropriate pain scale
• Document, Document, Document,
46. Post Op of Special Populations
Geriatric
• If with Cognitive Impairment
• PAINAD scale
• Observe & re-assess frequently
• Guard/observe for delirium
• superimposed on dementia
• Know drug side effects
• Know method of elimination
47. Medication Use
• Review information gathered during pre
op assessment
• If something has not worked in the past
don’t use it.
• Explain what you are doing and what
you are giving
• When in doubt, follow the WHO
guidelines
48. World Health Organization (WHO)
3- Step Ladder approach to pain
management
• Step 1- Mild Pain (1-3/10)
• Nonopioid
• Add adjuvant analgesic agent
(i.e.) Ice, heat
49. WHO cont’d
• Step 2 Mild to moderate pain (4-7/10)
• This step builds on step 1
• Treat with opioid combination drug
• (hydrocodone/acetaminophen)
• Watch ceiling effect of adjuvant drug
• Peds are dosed by weight
• Watch special needs patients/elderly
50. WHO cont’d
• Step 3- Severe pain (8-10/10)
• Use opioids
• Add adjuvant (i.e.)anti-anxiety,anti-
emetics, muscle relaxants
• Start with short acting opioids to
determine pain relief, breakthrough
needs and frequency.
• Switch to long acting use equianalgesic
dosing chart for conversion
51. POINTS TO REMEMBER
• The pain intensity determines the step
at which to begin.
• Opioids are the only group of analgesics
with no ceiling on dose with careful
titration.
• Most opioid side effects resolve within a
few days.
• Exception>>>>Constipation-- need to
write for this immediately
52. Commonly used first line opioids
• Codeine
• Morphine
• Hydromorphone
• Oxycodone
53. Share the following characteristics
• Half-life of immediate release
preparations is 2 to 4 hours
• Duration of analgesic effect between 4
to 5 hours when given at effective
doses.
• Sustained release formulations have
duration of analgesic effect of 8 to 12
hours
54. • Equianalgesic doses need to be
calculated when switching from one
drug to another
• when changing routes of administration
or both.
• An equianalgesic table should be used
as a guide in dose calculation
• Due to incomplete cross-tolerance
clinicians should consider reducing the
dose by 20 to 25% when ordering.
55. Morphine
Onset: 15 to 60 minutes
Peak Effect: 30 minutes to 1 hr
Half Life: 1.5 to 2 hr
IV: 0.05 to 0.1 mg/kg
5 minutes prior to procedure; max: 15
mg/dose
56. Morphine
Sedation, somnolence, respiratory distress
or depression, pruritis
Reversal:
Naloxone: 5 to 10 mcg/kg/dose; Single
dose should not exceed max
recommended adult dose of 0.2 mg
57. Fentanyl
• Fentanyl is 80 to 100 times more potent
than morphine.
• Studies report less constipation and
somnolence in patients using
transdermal fentanyl compared to those
using SR morphine.
58. Fentanyl
• Fentanyl’s high lipophilic properties
provide a sufficient sublingual
bioavailability of 90%, thus making it a
suitable opioid for use sublingually.
• Conditions that may effect absorption, bl
levels & clinical effects if the drug
• Morbid obesity
• Ascites
• opioid-naïve patients
59. Fentanyl
Onset: 1 to 5 minutes
• Peak Effect: (no data available)
• Half Life: 1.5 to 6 hr
• IV: 0.5 to 3 mcg/kg/dose; may repeat
after 30 to 60 minutes; max: 50
mcg/dose
• Use lower doses (0.5 to 1 mcg/kg/dose)
when used in combination with other
agents, such as midazolam
60. Fentanyl
• Respiratory distress or depression,
apnea, seizures, shock, chest wall
rigidity (most likely to occur with rapid
infusion or high doses)
• Reversal:
• Naloxone: 5 to 10 mcg/kg/dose; Single
dose should not exceed max
recommended adult dose of 0.2 mg
61. Sufentanil
• 5 to 10 times more potent than fentanyl.
• Injectable sufentanil (like fentanyl) is
readily absorbed through the mucous
membranes
• Early onset of action of about 5 to 10
minutes, when used sublingually
62. Sufentanil
• Good for incident pain control.
• Peak analgesic effect of 15 to 30
minutes
• Duration of the analgesic effect is 30 to
40 minutes.
• Use for incident pain control, dosing 10
to 15 minutes prior to the painful event.
63. Methadone
• Long half life of methadone prevent it
being a first-line opioid.
• When converting to methadone dose
reduction of 75 to 90% should be
considered
• Initiation for pain management is 5mg
bid or tid depending on age
64. Dilaudid
10mg IV morphine is equivalent to 1.3-
2mg Hydromorphone
IV Dilaudid has a half life of 2.5 hours,
duration of effect varies
Administering 1 mg or more of IV Dilaudid
every 1 - 2 hours leads to a build up of
the drug (stacking) and can increase
adverse effects like respiratory
depression. Know elimination
65. Stacking from delayed peak effect
Occurs when additional doses are given
prior to peak effect leads to multiple
doses, resulting in over dosage.
Caution:
Administration of a benzodiazepine with
narcotic analgesics increases the risk of
respiratory depression. (ie: Xanax,
Lorazepam, Versed, Valium)
66. Onset: 1 to 5 minutes (short acting)
• Peak Effect: 3 to 5 minutes (IV)
• Half Life: 1.5 to 12 hr
• Oral: 0.2 to 1 mg/kg; 30 to 45 minutes
before procedure; max: 20 mg
• IV: 0.05 mg/kg 3 minutes before
procedure (may repeat dose X 2); max:
2 mg/dose
Midazolam: CNS Depressant
68. POINTS TO REMEMBER
• Dosing intervals are determined by the
duration of action as well as the half-life
of the drug
• Know the route of elimination
• Adjust dose and frequency for special
populations.
• Be aware of prior surgeries involving
bowel, stomach, liver, kidneys
69. Opioid-induced Neurotoxicity (OIN)
• Hyperalgesia (heightened sensitivity to
the existing pain)
• Allodynia (a normally non-noxious
stimuli resulting in a painful sensation),
• Agitation/delirium with hallucinations
and possibly seizures.
• Due to the accumulation of toxic
metabolites and impaired renal
70. Post Op Documentation
• Document response to medication
• Pain relief
• Increased agitation
• Be pro-active if patient unable to
verbalize
• Painful procedures result in pain
(Treat as you would a family member)
71. GOAL
• Promote optimal pain management
• Reduce anxiety
• Support the patient
• Improve post op outcomes
• Promote patient satisfaction