Multimodal Approach to Pain Management Following Bipolar Hemiarthroplasty for Femoral Neck Fracture: I’m a Believer!: Commentary on an article by Hyun Kang, MD, et al.: “Effectiveness of Multimodal Pain Management After Bipolar Hemiarthroplasty for Hip ..

第一作者:Charles Cornell

2013-02-22   我要说

Multimodal Approach to Pain Management Following Bipolar Hemiarthroplasty for Femoral Neck Fracture: I’m a Believer!: Commentary on an article by Hyun Kang, MD, et al.: “Effectiveness of Multimodal Pain Management After Bipolar Hemiarthroplasty for Hip Fracture. A Randomized, Controlled Study”

Commentary The multimodal approach to pain management has been enthusiastically embraced in the hope that the undesirable side effects and consequences of traditional reliance on narcotic medications can be overcome. Orthopaedic surgical procedures are painful. Postsurgical pain has well-documented negative consequences, and poorly controlled postoperative pain not only slows recovery but also leads to unacceptable levels of patient dissatisfaction.
In the past two decades, techniques of continuous infusion of narcotics partially controlled by the patient either by an intravenous route or through the continuation of the epidural route after surgery has been very successful in helping to manage postoperative pain. Epidural patient-controlled anesthesia is especially attractive for lower-extremity surgery because narcotics can be mixed with local anesthetics, lowering the dose and toxicity of the narcotic while achieving very dramatic pain control. Unfortunately, this excellent control of pain has unwanted consequences. Patients who experience satisfactory pain relief when using epidural patient-controlled anesthesia often require a urinary catheter, experience nausea presumably from the epidural narcotic, and have relatively profound postural hypotension that limits their ability to mobilize out of bed while their pain is being controlled. The unintended consequence is an acceptable level of pain but discomfort from nausea and an in-hospital stay lengthened by relative immobility in the immediate postoperative period.
Multimodal and preemptive strategies to prevent postoperative pain have been improved by recent advances in the understanding of neuronal plasticity and how undertreated acute pain can lead to chronic pain. Also, clarifying the role that local inflammation plays in injured tissue, increasing the sensitization of nociceptors, has led to drug therapies incorporating nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) and cyclooxygenase-2 (COX-2) agents to preemptively control postoperative pain. Blocking the pain signal by a variety of methods, including narcotics, anti-inflammatory drugs, and peripheral nerve blockade (multimodal), has improved postoperative pain management and the overall quality and efficiency of care1-3.
Kang et al. applied these principles to the challenge of pain following hip fracture repair. They chose a single-blinded randomized trial of patients treated with hemiarthroplasty to determine whether their multimodal intervention, which consisted of preoperative oxycodone and celecoxib combined with large-volume periarticular injection, would improve postoperative pain control and patient mobility compared with fentanyl patient-controlled anesthesia alone. They found that their multimodal pain management provides additional pain relief until the fourth postoperative day, improves patient satisfaction at discharge, and reduces total narcotic consumption for postoperative pain management. They could not demonstrate a benefit in terms of better mobility or other long-term clinical advantages.
 

分享到: