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- M Yaster, J R Tobin, C Billett, J F Casella, and G Dover.
- Department of Anesthesiology/Critical Care Medicine, Johns Hopkins Hospital, Baltimore, MD.
- Pediatrics. 1994 Feb 1;93(2):310-5.
ObjectivesTo determine whether continuous epidural analgesia could effectively decrease pain and thereby improve the management of severe vaso-occlusive crisis in children with sickle cell disease who were unresponsive to conventional analgesic therapy.DesignRetrospective observational study.SettingA tertiary care hospital with a large pediatric sickle cell patient referral population.PatientsThe study describes nine children in 11 painful vaso-occlusive crises, unresponsive to high-dose systemic opioids, nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs, and adjunctive measures, who underwent continuous epidural analgesia to control pain.Outcome MeasuresSubjective pain scores, arterial oxygen saturation monitoring, and plasma lidocaine levels.MethodsPlacement of an epidural catheter for the administration of a continuous infusion of local anesthetic, alone, or in combination with fentanyl, in the management of vaso-occlusive crisis.ResultsAn initiation of epidural analgesic therapy, 8 of 9 patients reported severe pain (8 to 10 on a scale of 0 to 10, 0 = no pain, 10 = the worst pain they ever experienced). Analgesic was immediate (pain score 0 to 2) in 8 of 9 patients, and continuously effective in 9 of 11 crises. Five patients required either the addition of fentanyl or changing the local anesthetic from lidocaine to bupivacaine to maintain analgesia for 2 to 5 days. In 7 of 9 patients, oxygen saturation dramatically increased from 87 to 95% to 99 to 100% after epidural analgesia was initiated. In all patients, plasma lidocaine levels ranged from 1.1 to 4.6 mg/L and dose-related toxicity did not occur. One patient developed hypotension secondary to high sympathetic blockade (T-4), one had an inadvertent dural puncture during insertion of the catheter, one had the epidural catheter removed for fever, and one achieved analgesia only transiently. There were no other complications, and epidural analgesia was not associated with sedation, respiratory depression, or limitation of movement. All epidural catheters were cultured on removal, and colonization did not occur.ConclusionsEpidural analgesia with local anesthetics administered alone or in combination with fentanyl effectively and safely treats the pain of sickle cell vaso-occlusive crisis unresponsive to conventional pain management and does so without causing sedation, respiratory depression, or significant limitation on ambulation. Furthermore, early treatment of painful crisis with this technique may improve oxygenation, a critical factor in the evolution of further sickling.
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