BACKGROUND:Postoperative pain in patients with bone and soft tissue cancer is different from that of other surgical patients due to the severity of the pain generated during surgery and because many of them have already been in pain preoperatively. The search for optimal intravenous pharmacologic management for this population is an ongoing one. We conducted a 10-month prospective, randomised, double blind study to compare the effects of a standard morphine dose to a 35%-lower dose plus a subanaesthetic dose of ketamine for postoperative pain control in patients undergoing bone and soft tissue cancer surgery under standardised general anaesthesia. METHODS: After extubation, when objectively awake (>or=5/10 on a 0-10 visual analogue scale (VAS)) and complaining of pain (>or=5/10 VAS), patients were connected to an intravenous patient-controlled analgesia (IV-PCA) device that delivered 1.5 mg morphine/bolus (MO group) or 1 mg morphine+5mg ketamine/bolus (MK group), with a 7 min lockout time. Rescue intramuscular diclofenac 75 mg was available Q4/day. Follow-up lasted 96 h. RESULTS:Fifty-seven patients (24 males, aged 18-74 years) completed the study. Pain scores were lower in the MK group compared to the MO patients, although MO patients (n=29) used 32.9+/-24.9 mg/patient morphine during the first 24 postoperative h compared to 14.6+/-11.4 mg/patient (P<0.05) for the MK patients (n=28). At that time point, 11 MO versus 4 MK patients still required IV-PCA (P<0.05). Diclofenac was also used more in the MO group. All vital signs were similar between the groups. The physiotherapy score was 35% higher for the MK patients (P<0.05). No patient had hallucinations. Postoperative nausea and vomiting rates were higher in the MO group. CONCLUSIONS: The use of subanaesthetic ketamine plus 2/3 the standard dose of morphinefollowing bone and tissue resections results in 1) lower and more stable pain score, 2) approximately 60% morphine sparing effect, 3) a shorter period of postoperative IV-PCA dependence. Such therapy is also associated with better early physical performance.
RCT Entities:
BACKGROUND:Postoperative pain in patients with bone and soft tissue cancer is different from that of other surgical patients due to the severity of the pain generated during surgery and because many of them have already been in pain preoperatively. The search for optimal intravenous pharmacologic management for this population is an ongoing one. We conducted a 10-month prospective, randomised, double blind study to compare the effects of a standard morphine dose to a 35%-lower dose plus a subanaesthetic dose of ketamine for postoperative pain control in patients undergoing bone and soft tissue cancer surgery under standardised general anaesthesia. METHODS: After extubation, when objectively awake (>or=5/10 on a 0-10 visual analogue scale (VAS)) and complaining of pain (>or=5/10 VAS), patients were connected to an intravenous patient-controlled analgesia (IV-PCA) device that delivered 1.5 mg morphine/bolus (MO group) or 1 mg morphine+5mg ketamine/bolus (MK group), with a 7 min lockout time. Rescue intramuscular diclofenac 75 mg was available Q4/day. Follow-up lasted 96 h. RESULTS: Fifty-seven patients (24 males, aged 18-74 years) completed the study. Pain scores were lower in the MK group compared to the MO patients, although MO patients (n=29) used 32.9+/-24.9 mg/patientmorphine during the first 24 postoperative h compared to 14.6+/-11.4 mg/patient (P<0.05) for the MK patients (n=28). At that time point, 11 MO versus 4 MK patients still required IV-PCA (P<0.05). Diclofenac was also used more in the MO group. All vital signs were similar between the groups. The physiotherapy score was 35% higher for the MK patients (P<0.05). No patient had hallucinations. Postoperative nausea and vomiting rates were higher in the MO group. CONCLUSIONS: The use of subanaesthetic ketamine plus 2/3 the standard dose of morphine following bone and tissue resections results in 1) lower and more stable pain score, 2) approximately 60% morphine sparing effect, 3) a shorter period of postoperative IV-PCA dependence. Such therapy is also associated with better early physical performance.
Authors: Moon Ho Cha; Ji Hye Eom; Yoon Sook Lee; Woon Young Kim; Young Cheol Park; Sam Hong Min; Jae Hwan Kim Journal: Yonsei Med J Date: 2012-03 Impact factor: 2.759
Authors: Too Jae Min; Woon Young Kim; Won Ju Jeong; Jae Ho Choi; Yoon Sook Lee; Jae Hwan Kim; Young Cheol Park Journal: Korean J Anesthesiol Date: 2012-02-20
Authors: Elina Cv Brinck; Elina Tiippana; Michael Heesen; Rae Frances Bell; Sebastian Straube; R Andrew Moore; Vesa Kontinen Journal: Cochrane Database Syst Rev Date: 2018-12-20