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Anesthesia and analgesia · Aug 2005
Preoperative "fentanyl challenge" as a tool to estimate postoperative opioid dosing in chronic opioid-consuming patients.
- Jennifer J Davis, Jeffrey D Swenson, Robert H Hall, Jeffrey D Dillon, Ken B Johnson, Talmage D Egan, Nathan L Pace, and Su-Yi Niu.
- Department of Anesthesiology, University of Utah Medical Center, 30 North 1900 East, Room 3C 444, Salt Lake City, UT 84132, USA. jennifer.davis@hsc.utah.ed
- Anesth. Analg. 2005 Aug 1;101(2):389-95, table of contents.
UnlabelledWhen opioids are used for postoperative pain control, it is useful to define the dose-response relationship for analgesia and respiratory depression. We studied 20 chronically opioid-consuming patients having elective multilevel spine fusion. Preoperatively, each patient received a fentanyl infusion of 2 microg x kg(-1) x min(-1) until the respiratory rate was <5 breaths/min. Pharmacokinetic simulations were used to estimate the effect site concentration at the time of respiratory depression and to predict the patient-controlled analgesia settings that would provide an effect-site fentanyl concentration that was 30% of the concentration associated with respiratory depression. Postoperatively, patient-controlled analgesia settings were adjusted to achieve 2-3 demand doses per hour. At steady-state patient-controlled analgesia settings, arterial blood gases and plasma fentanyl levels were measured. Sixteen patients required no adjustment or one patient-controlled analgesia adjustment. The median arterial Pco(2) level was 41 mm Hg and the interquartile range was 39-46 mm Hg. Plasma fentanyl levels demonstrated a significant correlation to the estimated effect-site concentration associated with respiratory depression determined during the preoperative fentanyl challenge. A preoperative fentanyl challenge used with pharmacokinetic simulations may be a useful tool to individualize the administration of analgesics to chronically opioid-consuming patients.ImplicationsIn chronically opioid-consuming patients, doses causing respiratory depression and analgesia may differ from those in opioid-naive individuals. A preoperative infusion of fentanyl, used in conjunction with pharmacokinetic simulation, may be a valuable tool for identifying clinical end-points, such as respiratory depression and analgesia, and individualizing postoperative treatment of pain in patients who chronically consume opioids.
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