Literature DB >> 28820799

Regional anesthesia and analgesia after surgery in ICU.

Mathieu Capdevila1, Séverin Ramin, Xavier Capdevila.   

Abstract

PURPOSE OF REVIEW: The aim is to demonstrate that ICU physicians should play a pivotal role in developing regional anesthesia techniques that are underused in critically ill patients despite the proven facts in perioperative and long-term pain, organ dysfunction, and postsurgery patient health-related quality of life improvement. RECENT
FINDINGS: Regional anesthesia and/or analgesia strategies in ICU reduce the surgical and trauma-stress response in surgical patients as well as complications incidence. Recent studies suggested that surgical/trauma ICU patients receive opioid-hypnotics continuous infusions to prevent pain and agitation that could increase the risk of posttraumatic stress disorder and chronic neuropathic pain symptoms, and chronic opioid use. Regional anesthesia use decrease the use of intravenous opioids and the ectopic activity of injured small fibers limiting those phenomena. In Cochrane reviews and prospective randomized trials in major surgery patients, regional anesthesia accelerates the return of the gastrointestinal transit and rehabilitation, decreases postoperative pain and opioids use, reduces ICU/hospital stay, improves pulmonary outcomes, including long period of mechanical ventilation and early extubation, reduces overall adverse cardiac events, and reduces ICU admissions when compared with general anesthesia and intravenous opiates alone. The reduction of long-term mortality has been reported in major vascular or orthopedic surgeries.
SUMMARY: Promoting regional anesthesia/analgesia in ICU surgical/trauma patients could undoubtedly limit the risk of complications, ICU/hospital stay, and improve patient's outcome. The use of regional anesthesia permits a high doses opioid use limitation which is mandatory and should be considered as feasible and well tolerated in ICU.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2017        PMID: 28820799     DOI: 10.1097/MCC.0000000000000440

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Curr Opin Crit Care        ISSN: 1070-5295            Impact factor:   3.687


  5 in total

Review 1.  Opioid Tolerance in Critical Illness.

Authors:  J A Jeevendra Martyn; Jianren Mao; Edward A Bittner
Journal:  N Engl J Med       Date:  2019-01-24       Impact factor: 91.245

Review 2.  Decrypting the cellular and molecular intricacies associated with COVID-19-induced chronic pain.

Authors:  Mousmi Rani; Ankit Uniyal; Vinod Tiwari
Journal:  Metab Brain Dis       Date:  2022-07-18       Impact factor: 3.655

3.  Pectoral Nerve (PECs) block for postoperative analgesia-a systematic review and meta-analysis with trial sequential analysis.

Authors:  Zhaosheng Jin; Ru Li; Tong J Gan; Yaohua He; Jun Lin
Journal:  Int J Physiol Pathophysiol Pharmacol       Date:  2020-02-25

4.  The impact of fascia iliaca nerve blockade on early postoperative pain and recovery after hip arthroscopy for femoroacetabular impingement syndrome.

Authors:  Grant August; Andrea H Johnson; Justin J Turcotte; Benjamin M Petre
Journal:  J Hip Preserv Surg       Date:  2021-10-28

Review 5.  Analgesia and sedation in patients with ARDS.

Authors:  Gerald Chanques; Jean-Michel Constantin; John W Devlin; E Wesley Ely; Gilles L Fraser; Céline Gélinas; Timothy D Girard; Claude Guérin; Matthieu Jabaudon; Samir Jaber; Sangeeta Mehta; Thomas Langer; Michael J Murray; Pratik Pandharipande; Bhakti Patel; Jean-François Payen; Kathleen Puntillo; Bram Rochwerg; Yahya Shehabi; Thomas Strøm; Hanne Tanghus Olsen; John P Kress
Journal:  Intensive Care Med       Date:  2020-11-10       Impact factor: 17.440

  5 in total

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