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Comparative Study Controlled Clinical Trial
Effects of untreated preoperative essential hypertension on post-operative pain after major abdominal surgery.
- F Luo, X J Cai, and Z Y Li.
- Department of Anaesthesiology, Sir Run Run Shaw Hospital, School of Medicine, Zhejiang University, Hangzhou, China.
- Eur J Pain. 2013 Jan 1;17(1):94-100.
BackgroundHypertension has been associated with hypoalgesia. This prospective study was designed to test the effects of untreated preoperative essential hypertension on post-operative pain intensity and morphine requirement after major abdominal surgery.MethodsSixty subjects (30 untreated essential hypertensives and 30 normotensives) scheduled for abdominal surgery were included in this study. All subjects received standardized anaesthetic with intra-operative fentanyl and patient-controlled analgesia with morphine for 48 h post-operatively as the only analgesics. Pain intensity scores, cumulative morphine requirement and side effects were recorded until 48 h post-operatively.ResultsAll subjects with essential hypertension had systolic hypertension, 93.3% had grade 1 severity and 6.7% had grade 2 severity. 23.3% of essential hypertensive subjects had elevated diastolic blood pressure. Essential hypertensive subjects had significantly lower total post-operative morphine requirement (29.6 mg vs. 49.9 mg; p = 0.002), significantly lower verbal rating scale post-operative pain intensity scores at rest and with coughing (p = 0.000), and significantly less incidence of post-operative pruritus (p = 0.048) over 48 h than normotensive subjects. There were no post-operative differences in the incidence of post-operative nausea (p = 0.982) or vomiting (p = 0.644) between the two groups.ConclusionUntreated essential hypertension is associated with significantly reduced post-operative morphine requirement and pain intensity, suggesting hypertension-associated hypoalgesia.© 2012 European Federation of International Association for the Study of Pain Chapters.
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