| Literature DB >> 6147422 |
J R Atwell, R C Flanigan, R L Bennett, D C Allen, B A Lucas, J W McRoberts.
Abstract
We report on 13 patients undergoing flank incisions in whom the postoperative pain was managed with a patient-controlled analgesia device. An initial group of 7 patients was used to determine the optimal injection dose for each patient and to examine variability in narcotic requirement during the postoperative course. A progressive decrease in narcotic need was noted during the postoperative course with patient-controlled analgesia, resulting in excellent patient acceptance, no postoperative complications and no drug-seeking behavior. A second group of 10 patients was randomized prospectively to receive either patient-controlled analgesia or a standard regimen of intramuscular morphine sulfate. Based on nursing observations, an analgesia and sedation scale was developed that compared the 2 groups. Analysis of a questionnaire evaluating subjective perception of postoperative pain revealed significantly less pain, less sedation and greater activity among patients randomized to patient-controlled analgesia (95 per cent confidence limit).Entities:
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Year: 1984 PMID: 6147422 DOI: 10.1016/s0022-5347(17)49834-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Urol ISSN: 0022-5347 Impact factor: 7.450