M J Griffin1, L Brennan, A J McShane. 1. Department of Anaesthesia and Intensive Care, St. Vincent's Hospital, Dublin, Ireland. michael.griffin@yale.edu
Abstract
PURPOSE: To determine the effect of intensive preoperative education on the outcome of Patient Controlled Analgesia (PCA) postoperatively. METHODS: This prospective randomised study was carried out in a single teaching hospital over three months. One group of patients (n = 42) received a 20 min standardised tutorial regarding PCA use from a single investigator and the other group (n = 43) received no additional education apart from the routine preoperative anaesthetic consultation. A blinded investigator assessed the patients following surgery. Pain scores and morphine consumption, patient satisfaction, side-effect profile and anti-emetic use were recorded at six, 24 and 48 hr postoperatively. RESULTS:Pain scores, satisfaction scores and morphine consumption were similar in both groups throughout the study period. Fewer patients in the tutored group complained of nausea from 6 to 24 hr than did untutored patients (28% vs 51%; P < 0.05). More tutored patients used antiemetic medication from 0 to 6 (28% vs 12%; P < 0.05) and 6 to 24 hr (37% vs 19%; P < 0.05). Side effect profile and requirement for rescue analgesia was otherwise similar in both groups. CONCLUSION: Our results suggest that specific preoperative education of patients using PCA does not alter pain scores, morphine consumption or patient satisfaction but may result in earlier and more effective use of anti-emetic medication.
RCT Entities:
PURPOSE: To determine the effect of intensive preoperative education on the outcome of Patient Controlled Analgesia (PCA) postoperatively. METHODS: This prospective randomised study was carried out in a single teaching hospital over three months. One group of patients (n = 42) received a 20 min standardised tutorial regarding PCA use from a single investigator and the other group (n = 43) received no additional education apart from the routine preoperative anaesthetic consultation. A blinded investigator assessed the patients following surgery. Pain scores and morphine consumption, patient satisfaction, side-effect profile and anti-emetic use were recorded at six, 24 and 48 hr postoperatively. RESULTS:Pain scores, satisfaction scores and morphine consumption were similar in both groups throughout the study period. Fewer patients in the tutored group complained of nausea from 6 to 24 hr than did untutored patients (28% vs 51%; P < 0.05). More tutored patients used antiemetic medication from 0 to 6 (28% vs 12%; P < 0.05) and 6 to 24 hr (37% vs 19%; P < 0.05). Side effect profile and requirement for rescue analgesia was otherwise similar in both groups. CONCLUSION: Our results suggest that specific preoperative education of patients using PCA does not alter pain scores, morphine consumption or patient satisfaction but may result in earlier and more effective use of anti-emetic medication.
Authors: Rachael Powell; Neil W Scott; Anne Manyande; Julie Bruce; Claus Vögele; Lucie M T Byrne-Davis; Mary Unsworth; Christian Osmer; Marie Johnston Journal: Cochrane Database Syst Rev Date: 2016-05-26