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J Am Acad Orthop Sur · Mar 2002
ReviewPain management after major orthopaedic surgery: current strategies and new concepts.
- Raymond S Sinatra, Jaime Torres, and Arsenio M Bustos.
- Department of Anesthesiology, Yale University School of Medicine, New Haven, CT 06520-8051, USA.
- J Am Acad Orthop Sur. 2002 Mar 1;10(2):117-29.
AbstractSeveral recently developed analgesic techniques effectively control pain after major orthopaedic surgery. Neuraxial analgesia provided by epidural and spinal administration of local anesthetics and opioids provides the highest level of pain control; however, such therapy is highly invasive and labor intensive. Neuraxial analgesia is contraindicated in patients receiving low-molecular-weight heparin. Continuous plexus and peripheral neural blockades offer excellent analgesia without the side effects associated with neuraxial and parenteral opioids. Intravenous patient-controlled analgesia allows patients to titrate analgesics in amounts proportional to perceived pain stimulus and provide improved analgesic uniformity. Oral sustained-release opioids offer superior pain control and greater convenience than short-duration agents provide. Opioid dose requirements may be reduced by coadministration of COX-2-type nonsteroidal analgesics.
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