| Literature DB >> 29973967 |
Roberta De Jong1, Alexander J Shysh2,1.
Abstract
Multimodal analgesia may include pharmacological components such as regional anesthesia, opioid and nonopioid systemic analgesics, nonsteroidal anti-inflammatories, and a variety of adjuvant agents. Multimodal analgesia has been reported for a variety of surgical procedures but not yet for lower limb amputation in vasculopathic patients. Perioperative pain management in these patients presents a particular challenge considering the multiple sources and pathways for acute and chronic pain that are involved, such as chronic ischemic limb pain, postoperative residual limb pain, coexisting musculoskeletal pain, phantom limb sensations, and chronic phantom limb pain. These pain mechanisms are explored and a proposed protocol for multimodal analgesia is outlined taking into account the common patient comorbidities found in this patient population.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29973967 PMCID: PMC6008740 DOI: 10.1155/2018/5237040
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pain Res Manag ISSN: 1203-6765 Impact factor: 3.037
Multimodal analgesia: pharmacological components.
| Type | Examples | |
|---|---|---|
| Principle | Regional anesthesia | Central neuraxial or peripheral nerve block |
| Single-shot or continuous catheter | ||
| +/− local infiltration analgesia | ||
| Opioid analgesics | Oxycodone, morphine, fentanyl, hydromorphone | |
| Systemic nonopioid analgesics | Acetaminophen, nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) | |
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| Adjuvants | Gabapentinoids | Gabapentin, pregabalin |
| N-methyl D-aspartate (NMDA) receptor antagonists | Ketamine, memantidine, dextromethorphan, magnesium | |
| Alpha-2 adrenergic agents | Clonidine | |
| Glucocorticoids | Dexamethasone | |
| Others | Antidepressant, calcitonin, nicotine, capsaicin, cannabinoid, lidocaine | |
Complexity of pain associated with lower limb amputation.
| Onset & duration | Comments | References | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Ischemic limb pain | Preoperative to intraoperative. | Pain intensity prior to amputation is a significant predictor of developing chronic limb pain. | [ |
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| Residual limb pain (stump pain) | Intraoperative to 1-2 weeks postoperative. Median pain 15.5 on a 0–100 visual analog scale in the first week postoperatively. Severe pain in 5–10% of patients. | Stump pain (sharp, localized pain) gradually lessens as the wound heals. May be prolonged if complications arise such as infection, tissue necrosis, wound dehiscence, osteomyelitis, and neuroma formation. | [ |
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| Phantom limb pain | Onset 1–7 days postoperative (or longer). Incidence up to 85%. Mean pain 22 on a 0–100 visual analog scale at 6 months after amputation. Severe pain in 5–10% of patients. May persist for months to years. | Symptoms: Intermittent (or sometimes constant) aching, cramping, burning, shooting, stabbing, boring, squeezing, or throbbing pains. Multiple poorly understood etiologies. | [ |
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| Phantom limb sensations | Onset 1–7 days postoperative. Incidence up to 90%. May persist for months to years. | Symptoms: Nonpainful sensations that the amputated limb still exists but may feel twisted deformed or have muscle cramps, tingling or itching. Multiple poorly understood etiologies. | [ |
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| Other musculoskeletal pain | Postoperative. | Back, hip, and knee pain with gait abnormalities related to changes in mechanics due to the amputated limb/prosthetic. | [ |
Pharmacologic components of multimodal analgesia for perioperative pain relief for lower limb amputation (LLA).
| Component | Representative drug/dose | Comments | References |
|---|---|---|---|
| Regional anesthesia | Various regional anesthesia techniques: epidural, spinal, and peripheral nerve block catheters. | ||
| Example: stump catheter | Bupivacaine 0.125–0.25% | Continuous infusion of 4–14 mL/hr (may add bolus 2–5 mL with lockout of 20–60 minutes). Continue for 4–5 days postoperatively. | [ |
| Ropivacaine 0.1–0.5% | No benefit in prevention of PLP (of possible benefit if extended over a longer period of time perioperatively). | [ | |
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| Opioid analgesics | Variety of agents | May be of use for short term or breakthrough pain control postoperatively. Use lowest doses that provide adequate analgesia with tolerable side effects. Wean as soon as possible and try to avoid long-term use. Intravenous or oral morphine may reduce PLP but has significant side effects. | [ |
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| Systemic nonopioid analgesics | Acetaminophen: up to 4000 mg/day for 3–5 days duration | Reduction of dose in debilitated patients. Good safety profile but use cautiously in patients with hepatic impairment. | [ |
| NSAIDS: variety of agents | For breakthrough pain if renal function adequate and no contraindications. Routine or long-term use in the elderly is not recommended due to GI and renal toxicity. | [ | |
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| Gabapentinoids | Gabapentin: 100 mg BID to TID, up to 1200 mg TID maintenance | Start with low dose and gradually titrate to an increased dose every few days, up to 2400–3600 mg/day total dose. Use lower dose if poor renal function. May take several weeks to see peak effect. Dose-limiting side effects of somnolence, dizziness, headache, and nausea. Efficacy for PLP inconclusive, whether started early or late. | [ |
| Pregabalin: 50 mg once daily, up to 150 mg BID | Start with single daily low dose and gradually increase to twice daily only after one week, up to 150 mg BID. Consider monitoring renal function. Dose-limiting side effects of drowsiness, dizziness, ataxia, and blurred vision. Efficacy for PLP unknown. | [ | |
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| NMDA antagonists | Ketamine low-dose IV infusion: 0.1–0.2 mg/kg/hr for 24–72 hours (for acute pain) or 0.4–0.5 mg/kg infusion over 45–60 minutes (therapy for chronic PLP) | Caution with hepatic impairment. Contraindicated with elevated intracranial or intraocular pressure, globe injuries, high-risk coronary or vascular disease, history of psychosis, sympathomimetic syndrome, recent liver transplantation, and porphyria. Only limited studies when infusions used for acute pain treatment for LLA. Some reports of short therapeutic infusions for established chronic PLP. | [ |
| Oral dextromethorphan 60–90 mg BID for 10 days (therapy for chronic PLP) | Limited small studies in (cancer) amputees. Dose-related side effects of tachycardia, respiratory depression, nausea, vomiting, hallucinations, and acute changes in memory and cognition. Thus, avoid doses above 2 mg/kg. | [ | |
| Ketamine and dextromethorphan (but not memantidine) have shown some benefit in treatment of PLP but are limited by side effects. | [ | ||
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| Antidepressants | Amitriptyline 25 mg TID (or 50–100 mg once daily at bedtime) titrated to maximum 150 mg/day | For geriatrics, start amitriptyline at 10 mg once daily at bedtime, increase weekly by 10 mg/day. Side effects are dry mouth, drowsiness, sedation, orthostatic hypotension, constipation, urinary retention, weight gain, and arrhythmia. Contraindicated in glaucoma, prostatism, and significant cardiovascular disease. | [ |
| Nortriptyline 25 mg TID titrated to maximum 150 mg/day | For geriatrics, start nortriptyline at 10 mg once daily, increase weekly by 10 mg/day. Similar precautions as per amitriptyline. If adequate pain relief is obtained with amitriptyline but unable to tolerate side effects, consider a trial of nortriptyline. | [ | |
| Mirtazapine 15 mg once daily at bedtime titrated to maximum 45 mg/day | For geriatrics, start mirtazapine at 7.5 mg once daily at bedtime. | [ | |
| One study showed success in abolishing PLP with amitriptyline and tramadol in young, posttraumatic amputees. One case report of four patients who exhibited a marked (>50%) reduction in PLP with the use of mirtazapine. | [ | ||
Perioperative multimodal acute pain management protocol for lower limb amputation (LLA).
| Phase | Focus | Multimodal pain management | Comments | Precautions/references |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Preoperative | Assess and treat acute or chronic pain before surgery. Optimize an analgesic regime based on the patient's condition. |
| Consult the acute pain service (APS) if the patient has: | Aggressive and early treatment of pain is needed to mitigate the severity of chronic limb pain [ |
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| Intraoperative | Perineural (CPNB) “stump” catheter surgically placed: |
| For CPNB infusions: | APS is contacted for all issues related to the CPNB catheter (i.e., disconnection, choice to continue or remove the CPNB catheter) [ |
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| Postoperative day 0-1 | Control residual limb pain (RLP). Maintain the preexisting analgesic regime. Prevent opioid withdrawal. |
| APS follows patients with CPNB infusions and orders all analgesics, antipruritics, antiemetics, and sedating medications. | Notify APS if the patient complains of persistent pain (>5/10) not relieved with an increase in CPNB infusion rate or other analgesics ordered. CPNB catheter may require a repeat bolus of local anesthetic (as intraoperatively) [ |
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| Postoperative day 2–3 | Assess and aggressively treat residual limb pain (RLP) and phantom limb pain (PLP). |
| Adjust CPNB infusion rate and opioid doses along with adjuvant agents to provide adequate pain relief. | Only use parenteral opioids (IVPB or PCA) in the early postoperative phase to manage pain. Switch to oral opioid as soon as possible [ |
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| Postoperative day 3-4 | Pain management coordinated with increased activity | Maintain CPNB infusion and multimodal analgesia. | Consider consulting the chronic pain service for optimizing a long-term pain management plan. | Initiate early plans for the eventual analgesic regime, especially for complex pain patients [ |
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| Postoperative day 5 | Discontinue CPNB catheter | CPNB catheter removed with initial dressing change to the residual limb (unless ordered for a longer duration by the anesthesiologist or if requested by the vascular surgery team) | Maximum period of time for CPNB catheter to remain in place: 7 days [ | Gradually wean patient off opioid and nonopioid analgesics. Adjust adjuvant doses with the overall goal of reduction and/or eventual discontinuation |
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| Postoperative day 6 and following | Management of persistent pain and/or phantom limb pain (PLP), if present | Continue multimodal analgesia agents (not including the CPNB catheter) at lowest possible doses. | Treat persistent pain like neuropathic pain. [ | Currently there are no consensus guidelines for the optimal management of chronic PLP [ |
IVPB, intravenous piggyback; PCA, patient-controlled analgesia; APS, acute pain service; CPNB, continuous peripheral nerve block; RLP, residual limb pain; NSAID, nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drug; GI, gastrointestinal; PLP, phantom limb pain; OSA, obstructive sleep apnea.