| Literature DB >> 35202071 |
Abstract
Patient-controlled analgesia (PCA) is an effective method for controlling acute pain, including postoperative pain in adults and in children from five years of age, pain resulting from labor, trauma, or other medical situations, or chronic and malignant pain. The treatment consists of a mini-computer-controlled infusion pump permitting the administration of on-demand, continuous, or combined doses of analgesic (mainly opioid) variations in response to therapy, which allows pain to be significantly controlled. Intravenous (IV)-PCA minimizes individual pharmacodynamics and pharmacokinetic differences and is widely accepted as a reference method for mild or severe postoperative pain. IV-PCA is the most studied route of PCA; other delivery methods have been extensively reported in the literature. In addition, IV-PCA usually voids the gap between pain sensation and analgesic administration, permitting better recovery and fewer side effects. The most commonly observed complications are nausea and vomiting, pruritus, respiratory depression, sedation, confusion and urinary retention. However, human factors such as pharmacy preparation and device programming can also be involved in the occurrence of these complications, while device failure is much less of an issue.Entities:
Keywords: PCA; acute pain; intravenous morphine; patient-controlled analgesia; postoperative pain
Year: 2022 PMID: 35202071 PMCID: PMC8877436 DOI: 10.3390/pharmacy10010022
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pharmacy (Basel) ISSN: 2226-4787
Options for components of multimodal postoperative pain therapy for commonly performed surgeries.
| PCA IV and/or Other Systemic Therapies * | Side Specific Infiltration or Block with or without | Neuraxial Anesthetic Techniques *** | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Thoracotomy/thoracoscopy | ++ | Paravertebral block ++ | +++ |
| Laparotomy | ++ | Infiltration catheters | +++ |
| Laparoscopy | +++ | Infiltration ++ | + |
| Hip | +++ | ++ | ++ |
| Knee | ++ | +++ | ++ |
| Shoulder/upper arm | ++ | +++ | |
| Spinal fusion | +++ | ++ | |
| Cesarean section | ++ | TAP block ++ | +++ |
| Breast surgery | ++ | Paravertebral block +++ | |
| CABG | +++ | ||
| Cervicofacial surgery | +++ | +++ When indicated |
* Opioids/non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs/Gabapentin or pregabalin/IV ketamine/; ** Block such as femoral, fibular and paravertebral; TAP = transverse abdominal plain block using local anesthetics; *** Epidural with local anesthetics (with or without intrathecal opioid). Most of these surgeries are also reported to yield chronic post-surgical pain [9,10,21,26,27,28,29,30,31,32]. +: moderate indication, ++: acceptable indication,+++: good indication.
Figure 1Presentation of analgesic corridor concept: subcutaneous or intramuscular injection vs. PCA IV injection of lower dose of opioid. MEAC, minimum effective analgesic concentration.
Bolus dose and lockout period with different opioids medications.
| Analgesic | Bolus Dose | Lockout Period (Minutes) |
|---|---|---|
| Morphine | 1 mg | 5–10 |
| Fentanyl | 10 µg | 5–10 |
| Hydromorphone | 0.25 mg | 5–10 |
| Remifentanil | 0.5 µg/kg | 2 |
| Sufentanil | 5 µg | 5–10 |
Comparison of different opioids when used in a PCA mode [52,53,54].
| Efficiency | Side Effects | |
|---|---|---|
| Oxycodone | As potent as morphine | May have fewer severe side effects |
| Hydromorphone | Higher incidence of CNS side effects, excitation at higher dose | |
| Fentanyl | High potency +, may require more need for basal infusion rate | Lesser incidence of respiratory depression in comparison to morphine, but more programming errors |
| Sufentanil | High potency ++, high therapeutic index, more predictable profile, more need for basal infusion | Lower incidence of PONV in comparison to fentanyl |
| Tramadol | Ten times less potent than morphine | More PONV in some type of surgeries (e.g., spinal fusion) |
| Remifentanil | Very short duration, studies mainly in labor | Higher respiratory depression, less satisfaction in comparison to epidural analgesia |
CNS, central nervous system; PONV, postoperative nausea and vomiting. +: moderate indication, ++: acceptable indication.