| Literature DB >> 29946360 |
Kristin Salottolo1,2,3,4, Laura Peck5, Allen Tanner Ii6, Matthew M Carrick7, Robert Madayag8, Emmett McGuire5, David Bar-Or1,2,3,4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Widespread legislative efforts to legalize marijuana have increased the prevalence of marijuana use and abuse. The effects of marijuana on pain tolerance and analgesic pain management in the acute pain setting have not been reported. Although marijuana has been shown to have antinociceptive effects and is approved for medical use to treat chronic pain, anecdotal evidence suggests marijuana users admitted with traumatic injuries experience poorer pain control than patients who do not use marijuana. We hypothesized that marijuana users would report higher pain scores and require more opioid analgesia following traumatic injury.Entities:
Keywords: Acute pain management; Marijuana; Substance abuse; Vehicular trauma
Year: 2018 PMID: 29946360 PMCID: PMC6007004 DOI: 10.1186/s13037-018-0163-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Patient Saf Surg ISSN: 1754-9493
Fig. 1Average total daily opioid analgesics consumed, by marijuana (MJ) use in a non-drug users and b drug users (amphetamines, barbiturates, benzodiazepines, cocaine, opiates, PCP, or methamphetamine). Opioids were converted to be equianalgesic to 1 mg hydromorphone
Fig. 2Average daily pain numeric rating scale (NRS) scores by marijuana (MJ) use in a non-drug users and b drug users (amphetamines, barbiturates, benzodiazepines, cocaine, methamphetamine, opiates). Patients are instructed that pain scores should be four or less, where scores of zero are not expected
Characteristics and outcomes, by marijuana status
| Characteristic (%, n) | Marijuana user | Non-user | Chronic marijuana user | Episodic marijuana use | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Male sex | 61% (33) | 61% (126) | 0.97 | 63% (10) | 61% (23) | 0.89 |
| Age, yearsa | 28 (23–39) | 46 (26–65) |
| 23 (22–43) | 29 (23–38) | 0.37 |
| Cause of injury | 0.08 | 0.43 | ||||
| Motor vehicle | 80% (43) | 80% (166) | 69% (11) | 84% (32) | ||
| Motorcycle | 4% (2) | 11% (23) | 6% (1) | 3% (1) | ||
| Pedestrian | 17% (9) | 9% (18) | 25% (4) | 13% (5) | ||
| Normal Glasgow coma score 15 | 83% (45) | 81% (168) | 0.71 | 75% (12) | 87% (33) | 0.42 |
| Injury severity score ISSa | 9.5 (4–17) | 9 (5–14) | 0.74 | 7 (3.5–15.5) | 10 (4–17) | 0.37 |
| Intoxicated (BAC ≥ 80 mg/dL) | 26% (11) | 25% (35) | 0.98 | 31% (4) | 23% (7) | 0.71 |
| Urine drug screen (UDS) performed | 77% (41) | 68% (135) | 0.17 | 81% (13) | 76% (28) | 0.74 |
| Positive UDS for drugsb | 22% (12) | 2% (5) |
| 13% (2) | 26% (10) | 0.47 |
| Drugs user (UDS/self-report)b | 26% (14) | 4% (9) |
| 13% (2) | 32% (12) | 0.19 |
| Clinical outcome | ||||||
| Mortality | 0% (0) | 2% (5) | 0.59 | 0% (0) | 0% (0) | – |
| LOS, daysa | 2 (1–5) | 3 (1–6) | 0.57 | 3 (2–6) | 2 (1–4) | 0.35 |
| ICU LOS, daysa | 1.5 (0–4) | 2 (0–5) | 0.81 | 1.5 (0–3) | 1.5 (0–4.5) | 0.89 |
MJ marijuana, ICU intensive care unit, LOS length of stay
aData presented as median (IQR)
bDrugs: amphetamines, barbiturates, benzodiazepines, cocaine, methamphetamine, opiates
P < 0.05 in italic is clinically significant
Mean (standard error) daily opioid consumption and daily pain numeric rating scale (NRS) scores, by marijuana status and other drug use
| Outcome, stratified | Marijuana user ( | No marijuana use ( | |
|---|---|---|---|
| No other drug usea | ( | ( | |
| Mean opioid consumption | 8.53 (0.33) | 5.86 (0.18) |
|
| LSMb opioid consumption | 7.57 (0.36) | 5.65 (0.18) |
|
| Mean pain NRS score | 5.17 (0.15) | 4.17 (0.07) |
|
| LSMb mean pain NRS score | 4.92 (0.16) | 4.19 (0.11) |
|
| Other drug usea | ( | ( | |
| Mean opioid consumption | 8.81 (0.82) | 10.58 (0.97) | 0.29 |
| LSMb opioid consumption | 5.59 (0.81) | 6.10 (1.17) | 0.71 |
| Mean pain NRS score | 5.02 (0.24) | 5.54 (0.25) | 0.15 |
| LSMb mean pain NRS score | 5.28 (0.34) | 6.00 (0.48) | 0.07 |
Analyzed with a repeated measures linear mixed model
LSM least square mean
aDrug use: amphetamines, barbiturates, benzodiazepines, cocaine, methamphetamine, and opiates
bAdjusted for ISS, age, and cause of motor vehicle crash injury
P < 0.05 in italic is clinically significant